SUBFAMILY III. — ORTHOTYLIN^E. 809 



just behind the white one, velvety black, area behind the velvety bar and 

 entire cuneus steel-gray; membrane dusky-translucent, the cells and a 

 spot behind tip of cuneus darker; femora dark brown, shining; knees 

 and tips of coxa? yellowish, tibia? and tarsi pale brown; pleura dark 

 brown, ventrals shining black. Joint 1 of antenna? brown, paler at base 

 and tip, slightly shorter than width of vertex; 2 brownish-yellow, darker 

 toward apex, gradually thickened from the base, four times as long as 

 1 ; 3 dull yellow, minutely pubescent, two-fifths as long as 2, 4 missing. 

 Pronotum campanulate, basal portion strongly and evenly convex, little 

 longer, but much wider and higher than front one, minutely granulate 

 or subalutaceous. Scutellum small, moderately convex. Elytra strongly 

 constricted, the basal half of corium less than half the width of apical 

 third. Hind tibia?, male, almost twice as long as femora, very slender, 

 slightly flattened, feebly curved. Length, 6 mm. 



Type, a male in the collection of the Division of Entomology, 

 State Department of Agriculture, Raleigh, N. Car. Taken at 

 Windsor, N. Car., July 7, 1925. Named in honor of C. S. Brim- 

 ley, of Raleigh, who has furnished many specimens to aid my 

 work on Heteroptera. It differs from all described forms of 

 the genus in having but one whitish cross-bar on corium, in 

 the form of the bluish bloom-covered spot on clavus, in the 

 distinctly bell-shaped pronotum and very narrow basal half of 

 corium. 



850 ( — ). Pilophorus vanduzeei Knight, 1923, 540. 



Head and pronotum blackish-brown, opaque, sparsely clothed with 

 deciduous silvery hairs and erect bristle-like darker ones; scutellum shin- 

 ing black with similar silvery scales; basal two-thirds of elytra dark 

 velvety-brown, the area behind posterior silvery bar, including cuneus, 

 polished fuscous-brown; membrane dusky translucent with a darker 

 lunate spot at apex of larger cell; under surface and femora dark fuscous- 

 brown; tibia? paler brown; front coxa? in part yellow. Joints 1 — 3 of an- 

 tenna? reddish- to blackish-brown, 1 two-thirds the length of width of ver- 

 tex; 2 five times as long as 1, gradually thickened from base to apex, 

 much more so in female, 3 about two-fifths the length of 2, 4 pale, darker 

 at tip, nearly as long as 3. Beak reaching onto middle coxa?. Pronotum 

 with sides much less deeply sinuate than in amcenus Uhl., the basal half 

 of disk finely, transversely rugose-granulate. Scutellum with apical half 

 and sides flattened, middle third with an obtuse tubercle. Hind tibia? of 

 male strongly flattened, distinctly curved. Length, 5 — 5.3 mm. 



Lake County, Ind., July 14. Beaten from the gray pine, 

 Pinus divaricata (Ait.). Lakehurst and Jamesburg, N. J.; 

 Staten Island, N. Y., August (Davis). Recorded only from 

 Massachusetts, New Jersey, Maryland and Washington, D. C. 

 Occurs on the red pine, Pinus resinosa Ait. Distinguished by its 

 dark color, erect black hairs of upper surface and feebly sinuate 

 sides of pronotum. The P. crassipes Van Duzee (1918, 293) nee. 

 Poppius is a synonym. 



