398 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM vol. 83 



at apex, sometimes wholly brown except a stripe above; tarsi testa- 

 ceous or reddish testaceous; wings h3'^aline, veins testaceous to brown. 



Male. — Length about 1.75-2.75 mm. Similar to female; portion 

 of scape bearing sensorial punctures fairly broad apically and occupy- 

 ing somewhat more than one-third to about one-half of scape, sen- 

 soria fine to moderately coarse and dense. 



2V2?e.— U.S.N.M. no. 49776. 



Type locality. — Fennville, Mich. 



Remarks. — Described from 55 females and 46 males, all in the 

 United States National Museum. Most of these were obtained 

 "from bands on apple" in the codling moth survey of 1930 by the 

 U. S. Bureau of Entomology. The type and allotype are labeled 

 "Codling Moth Survey 1930, Coll. L. Brown, June, 1930." Six of 

 the paratypes were taken at East Falls Church, Va., by L. H. Weld, 

 June 30, 1926. 



Distribution. — New York (Sept.); New Jersey (June); Pennsyl- 

 vania; Delaware (Aug.); Maryland (July, Aug.); Virginia (June); 

 Kentucky (June); Indiana (June, July, Aug.); Michigan (May, June, 

 Aug., Sept.). 



Hosts. — One specimen in the U. S. National Museum from Staunton, 

 Va., is labeled "ex Cremastus cocoon. Oriental Fruit Moth Investi- 

 gation, specimen no. 1295." Another, from Fennville, Mich., is 

 labeled "bred from codUng moth larva, June 1926 by L. G. Gentner." 

 A third specimen is labeled "Reared from parasitized codling moth, 

 Dover, Del., Aug. 13, 1920, E. R. Selkregg, Quaint, no. 14123." The 

 last two specimens were probably hyperparasitic. 



PEBILAMPUS ANOMOCERUS Crawford 



Perilampus anomocerus Crawford, Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, vol. 16, p. 72, 

 1914. 



Female. — Length about 1.75-2.5 mm. Head: Frons without a 

 carina, meeting vertex in a curve; emargination of fron to vertex not 

 very deep or pronounced; cheeks straight or nearly straight; clypeus 

 sometimes as long as broad and hyperclypeal area sometimes almost 

 as long as clypeus; head in front view slightly transverse, rarely 

 elongate, and usually subtriangular (in the males rarely distinctly 

 transverse); eyes not reaching level of base of clypeus (may reach 

 same in the males); third joint (ring joint) of antennae as long as 

 wide, rarely shorter than wide, second joint (pedicel) usually very 

 distinctly longer than wide; front and face, except hyperclypeal area, 

 rather densely pubescent with stout whitish hair. 



Thorax: Area along inner margin of parapsides smooth or finely 

 aciculate; umbiUcate punctures on mesoscutum and scutellura round 

 or roundish; interspaces rather broad, especially so near middle of 

 mesoscutum, finely lineolately sculptiu-cd except near the middle line 

 of mesoscutum and scutellum, the scutellum laterally not granularly 



