122 



U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUIVI BULLETIN 209 



Dates of collection are distributed from midspring to midfall, with 

 apparent peaks of abundance in June and in September. Unusually- 

 early and late dates are: May 8 near Tigerville, S. C; May 22 at 

 Great Falls, Va.; May 28 on Plummers Island, Md.; Oct. 15 at State 

 College, Pa., and at Arlington, Va.; and Oct. 24 in Brazos County, 

 Tex. Other biological data with these specimens state that two dif- 

 ferent collections were made in woods; that a male emerged on Mar. 

 25 from material collected on Feb. 27 at North Cumberland, Pa., by 

 Kirk and Champlain; that a male emerged on June 2 from Carya 

 wood collected at Linglestown, Pa., by W. S. Fisher; that a male and 

 a female emerged in June from Carya wood collected at Forest Hills, 

 Mass. ; that a male emerged from Fagus grandijolia wood collected at 

 Durham, N. C, by Wm. Haliburton and J. A. Beal; and that a female 

 from Manhattan, Kans., was taken by H. E. Evans whUe trans- 

 porting prey {Paraphidippus aurantius) over a dried stream bed. 



This subspecies occurs in the Canadian, Transition, and Upper 

 Austral Zones from the Atlantic to the 100th meridian. It occurs in 

 woodlands and nests in dead wood. Adults are on the wing from 

 midspring to midfall. 



2c. Dipogon {Deuteragenia) papago floridanus, new subspecies 



Male: Forewing moderately infuscate, a little more hyaline basally 

 and between the basal vein and the stigma; hind wing subhyaline 

 with its apical part weakly infuscate. 



Figure 62. — Localities for Dipogon papago floridanus. 



Female: Punctures on mesopleuron separated by about 0.7 their 

 diameter; punctures on second tergite separated by about 3.0 their 

 diameter; wings blackish. 



Type: 9, Osceola County, Fla., Aug. 17, 1929, J. J. Kirkland 

 (Washington, USNM 61690). 



