216 



Journal New York Entomological Society. t Vol< xxvil. 



This is not an uncommon species in Utah, and neighboring states, 

 and the following specimens have been examined : Honeyville, Box- 

 elder Co., Utah, 1907, female (E. G. Titus), and Logan, Cache Co., 

 Utah, July 13, 1907, male, collection Dr. E. D. Ball. Promontory 

 Pt., Great Salt Lake, Utah, July II, 1911, male (Dr. J. M. Aldrich), 

 collection University of Idaho; Salt Lake City, Utah, male (Dr. 

 Henry Skinner), Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia; Stockton, Utah, July, 

 1913, two males; July, 1914, four males; July, 1915, female; Sept. 2, 

 1916, four males, all collected by Tom Spalding and in Davis col- 

 lection. South Creek, Beaver Co., Utah, two males (Engelhardt), 

 Davis collection. Cedar Creek, Iron Co., Utah, 5,500 ft., July 9, 1917, 

 seven males (G. P. Engelhardt) ; Bellevue, Washington Co., Utah, 

 4,500 ft., June, 1917, and July 7, 1917 (G. P. Engelhardt), Davis 

 collection. Kanab, Kane Co., Utah, June 24, 191 3, two males, col- 

 lection Dr. E. D. Ball. Flagstaff, Arizona, June 29, 1892, two males, 

 Davis collection. In Mr. Van Duzee's Catalogue of Hemiptera, 

 California and Oregon are also given as localities. 



Okanagana utahensis new species. PI. xx, fig. 4. 



Type male from Cedar Creek, Iron Co., Utah, 5,500 ft., July 9, 

 1917 (Geo. P. Engelhardt), Davis collection. 



Allotype female from Stockton, Utah, July, 1914 (Tom Spalding), 

 Davis collection. 



Resembles striatipes, but is larger and darker colored, and the 



KANA&ANA UTAHENSIS 



vestiture of the pronotum and mesonotum is not an appressed pubes- 

 cence as in that species, but contains many long silvery hairs. 



