208 



U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 2 09 



Figure 121. — Localities for Ageniella neglecta. 



hairs that are longer than the width of the sternite and incurved, and 

 with a median row or band of ascending hairs about 0.6 as long as the 

 marginal ones. 



Black. Wings subhyaline, the apical part of the forewing weakly 

 infuscate; seventh tergite with a large white spot. 



Female: Unknown. 



Specimens: cf, Patagonia, Ariz., June 24, 1933, E. H. Beamer 

 (Lawrence), cf (type), Boulder, Colo. Aug.? 26, 1908, S. A. Rohwer 

 (Cambridge), cf , Fort Collins, Colo., June 15, 1896, C. F. Baker 

 (Washington). 3 cf, visiting honeydew on Salix, Poudre Canyon 

 at 5,200 ft., Larimer County, Colo., Aug. 19 to 22, 1948, H. E. 

 Evans (Evans and Washington), cf , Monzano, N. Mex., June 26, 

 1941, R. H. Beamer (Evans). 9 cf , 14 miles west of Huauchinango, 

 Puebla, Mexico, June 17, 1951, P. D. Hurd (Berkeley, Evans, and 

 Townes). 9 cf, 15 kilometers east of Sombrerete, Zacatecas, Mexico, 

 July28to31, 1951, P. D. Hurd (Berkeley). 3 cf ,Teotiliuacdn,"Pyr.," 

 Mexico, June 15 and July 7, 1951, P. D. Hurd and H. E. Evans 

 (Berkeley, Evans, and Townes). 



CORONATA GROUP 



Clypeus with its apical hairless margin moderately wide, polished, 

 and separated from the rest of the clypeus by a groove; mesopleuron 

 with a carina extending obliquely downward and backward from the 

 front end of its transverse groove; propodeum without erect hairs, 

 only with pubescence; basal external carina of front coxa strongly 

 curved and ending at about the basal 0.3 of the coxa (weakly curved 

 and ending near the midlength of the coxa in the rest of the genus) ; 

 brush on inner side of hind tibia continuous to the apex; last tarsal 

 segment of all legs with several stout bristles beneath (these bristles 



