ceropalinae: tribe notocyphini 



223 



Paratypes: ScT, 29, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, July 23 and 

 24, 1951, P. D. Hurd and H. E. Evans (Berkeley, Evans, and Townes). 

 9, Mexico (Washington). 9, locality illegible, October (Washington). 



The series from Guadalajara is somewhat intermediate to the sub- 

 species dorsalis. 



This subspecies occurs in Mexico and Guatemala. 



Figure 130. — Localities for Notocyphus dorsalis arizonicus. 



lb. Notocyphus dorsalis arizonicus, new subspecies 



Plate 1, figure 12 



Male: Forewdng 8 to 12 mm. long. Black, marked with white as 

 follows: clj'peus laterally, front orbits broadly, posterior orbits nar- 

 rowly, hind margin of pronotum (reaching the lateral lobes), usually an 

 elongate oval median mark on mesoscutum, disc of scutellum, disc of 

 postscutellum, a pair of transverse oval areas at base of third tergite 

 (usually confluent), and seventh tergite. Palpi more or less whitish; 

 apical third of forewing infuscate, the rest hyaline to more or less 

 infuscate but always paler than on the apical third, the basal vein and 

 nervulus often margined with deeper infuscation; hind wing hyaline or 

 subhyaline, somewhat infuscate apicaliy. 



Female: Forewing 11 to 16 mm. long. Black. Mouth parts and 

 antennae more or less tinged with reddish brown; head and thorax 

 marked with orange-red as follows: frons, top of head, posterior orbit, 

 pronotum except its lower 0.3 di, mesonotum, metanotum, and pro- 

 podeum except laterally. Wings uniformly blackish. 



Type: cf , 6 miles west of Douglas on U. S. route 80, Ariz., July 28, 

 1948, H. E. Evans (Washington, USNM 61799). 



Paratypes: 29, Baboquivari Mts., July 7, 1924, O. C. Poling (San 

 Francisco). 9, Douglas, Ai'iz., June 16, 1942, E. C. Van Dyke (San 

 Francisco), cf, 29, 30 miles and 35 miles northeast of Douglas at 



