196 Journal New York Entomological .Society, [vol. xiv 



Culex triseriatus Dyar, Journ. N. \'. ent. soc, xi, 25, 1902. 



Culex triseriatus Dyar, Science, n. s., xvi, 672, 1902. 



Cult t triseriatus Johannsen, Bull. 68, \. Y. Sta. Mus., 423, 1903. 



Culex triseriatus Felt, Bull. 79, X. V. Sta. Mus., 336, 1904. 



( 'uh \ triseriatus Smith, N. J. Agr. exp. Sta., Rept. Mosq., 275, 1905. 



( ulex triseriatus Blanchard, Les Moustiques, 288, 1905. 



The larva lives in holes in trees, occasionally frequenting rain water 

 barrels, especially if placed in the woods. We have the species from 

 all along the Atlantic coast, but only from the continent. The senior 

 author and Mr. Caudell got it at New Smyrna, Florida, which is our 

 southermost record. 



Aedes albonotata Coquillett. Fig. 9. 

 Gynometopa albonotata Coquillett, Proc. ent. soc. Wash., vii, 183, 1906. 



Collected by Mr. Busck in the .San Francisco Mts. of San Domingo. 

 They were in bamboo stalks. Mr. Busck describes them as "snaky- 

 Looking larva?, ringed with red, pretty and distinctly marked." 

 Aedes calopus Meigen. Fig. 10. 



Culex Jasiatus Fabricius (not Meigen), Syst. Antliat., 36, 1805. 



Culex calopus Meigen, Syst. beschr. bek. eur. Zweifl. Ins., i, 3, 1818. 



Stegomyia fasciata Theobald, Mem., Liverp. Sch. Trop. Med., iv, App., iii, 1901. 



Stegotnyia fasciata Howard, Mosquitoes, 135, 1901. 



Stegomyia fasciata Dupree and Morgan, Science, n. s., xvi, 1037, 1902. 



Stegomyia fasciata Dyar, Proc, ent. soc. Wash., v, 51, 146, 1903. 



Stegomyia fasciata Parker, Beyer & Pothier, Bull. 13, Yellow Fev. Inst., 25, 1903. 



Stegomyia fasciata Taylor, Le Rev. de Med., Trop., 1903. 



Stegomyia fasciata Theobald , Mon. Culic, iii, 142, 1903. 



Stegomyia calopus Blanchard, Les Moustiques, 249, 1905. 



The well-known "yellow fever mosquito," a strictlv domestic 

 form. It was found by Mr. Busck and the junior author in nearlv 

 every town visited in the tropics. It occurs in the United States 

 sometimes as far North as Virginia, but in March, the senior author 

 and Mr. Caudell found it only at Key West and Miami, Florida, be- 

 low the line of hard frost. 



Aedes mediovittata Coquillett. Fig. 11. 

 Stegomyia mediovittata Coquillett, Can. ent., xxxviii, 60, 1906. 



Mr Busck got a lot of these peculiar larvae in San Domingo. They 

 differ from all our species in having the pecten of the air tube strong- 

 ly spirally twisted. Mr. Busck's localities are: a pot-hole in coral 

 rock, in a coral rock cave, in a hollow trunk of a royal palm 40 feet 

 from the ground and twice in hollow palm trunks, San Francisco Mts. 



