96 BULLETIN 143, UN-ITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



1921 (S. H. Emerson) ; female, Cold Springs Harbor, L. I., August 4, 



1921 (E. G. Anderson) ; female, Cold Springs Harbor, August 10, 1900; 



2 females. Orient, August 19, 1909; female, Huguenot, August 6, 1904; 



female. New Russia, Essex County, August IS, 1912 (J. C. Bradley). 

 NoETH Carolina : Female, Southern Pines, June 24, 1909 ; female, Raleigh 



early October (F. Sherman). 

 Oklahoma: Female, Wister, July 3 (H. S. Barber). 

 Pennsylvania: Female, Rockville, July 19, 1914; female, Euterline, July 17, 



1912 (E. Daecke.) 

 Tennessee: Female, Townshend, July 10, 1910; female, Allardt, Fantress 



County, August 18, 1922 (T. Hubbell). 

 Virginia: Female, Falls Church, June 17, 1913 (W. Middleton) ; female. Falls 



Church, August 4, 1913 (G. M. Greene) ; female, Falls Church, August 



4, 1913 (H. B. Kirk) ; female. Falls Church, September 1, 1914 (C. T. 



Greene) ; female, Falls Church, September 4, 1915 (C. T. Greene) ; female, 



Falls Church, September 9, 1912 (C. T. Greene) ; female, Loudoun County, 



August (F. C. Pratt) ; female, Wingina, August 2, 1916 (W. T. Davis) ; 



female, Lynchburg, July 29, 1916 (W. T. Davis). 



Segreffata, which has been known under the name champlaini, is 

 only a variety of sparsa Fox. Typical segregata does not have the 

 median spot of silvery pubescence at the apex of the second abdomi- 

 nal tergite. The apical fringe of the latter is largely black, the 

 lateral extremes only, silvery. In form and puncturation, the variety 

 segregata is almost an exact duplicate of sparsa. I have examined 

 the type of charnplaini Rohwer and find it to be the same as this 

 variety. 



23. DASYMUTILLA TEXANELLA, new name 



Mutilla texana Blake, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, vol. 7, p. 250, 1879, female. — 

 Dalle Torre, Cat. Hymen., vol. 8, p. 91, 1897, female. — Fox, Trans. Amer, 

 Ent. Soc, vol. 25, p. 241, 1899, female. — MelanDee, Trans. Amer. Ent. 

 Soc, vol. 19, p. 299, 1903, female. 



Sphacrophthalma texana Blake, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, vol. 13, p. 212, 

 1886, female. 



Ephuta (Ephuta) texana Andre, Gen. Ins., vol. 1, fasc. 11, p. 64, 1903, 

 female. 



T'y/je.— *Female, Texas, in collection of American Entomological 

 Society of Philadelphia. 

 Distribution. — Texas, Kansas, and Colorado. 



SPBCIMENS EXAMINED 



Colorado: Female, Bent County, August 29. 



Kansas: Female, Morton County, August 5, 1911 (F. X. Williams) ; female, 



Hamilton County, August 27; female, Greeley County (F. X. Williams); 



female, Wichita County (F. X. Williams) ; female, Scott County (F. X. 



Williams) ; 2 females, Logan County (F. X. Williams). 

 Texas: Female, Austin, October; 2 females. Eastland County, May 27, 1921 



(Grace O. Wiley) ; female, Eastland County, June 11, 1921 (Grace O. 



Wiley) ; female, Eastland County, August 19, 1920 (Grace O. Wiley) ; 



female, Stevens County, October 22, 1920 (Grace O. Wiley) ; female, 



Phantom Lake, Fort Davis Quad, June 6, 1916 (F. M. Gaige) ; 3 females, 



Juno, July 3, 1917 (R. C. Shannon). 



