AQUATIC IXSRCTS I\ NEW YORK STATE 329 



tabulated in the form of keys, to enable any one having an ele- 

 nientai\y knowledge of entomology to identify members of ithis 

 interesting group of insects. 



The Simuliidae are treated at greater length than the others, 

 more material being at hand for the study of this family'. In 

 the descriptions of the wings of the adult, the nomenclature of 

 Comstock and Needham (1898) has been followed. 



The aquatic larvae of the Diptera may be distinguished from 

 aquatic larvae of other insects by the absence of true, jointed 

 thoracic legs; in having abdominal ]>rolegs, or in being entirely 

 legless; in the most degenerate forms the head is reduced and 

 retracted within the pointed apex of the thorax, and no appen- 

 dages of the imago are visible. Their pupae either have promi- 

 nent prothoracic dorsal spiracles, often borne at the end of the 

 autennaelike processes, or the pupa is formed in the hardened 

 larval skin. The adults have but two wangs, or in a few rare 

 •cases are apterous. The presence of the balancers and the 

 absence of caudal filaments distinguish them from the males 

 of the Coccidae. The most familiar examples are house flies 

 and mosquitos. 



The Diptera in general are divided into two suborders: 

 Larvae with a differentiated head; pupae free or inclosed 

 in the larval skin; in either ease the larval skin bursts 

 for the extrication of the pupa or imago in a T-shaped 

 opening on the back of the anterior end, or rarely in a 

 transverse rent between the eighth and ninth abdominal 

 rings. The imago lacks the frontal lunule and ptilinum. 

 Examples are the gnats, midges, crane flies, horse 

 flies, snipe flies, robber flies, etc. (Nematocera and Bra- 



chycera) O r t h o r r h a p h a 



Larvae without differentiated head; pupae always inclosed 

 in the hardened larval skin (forming the so called pupa- 

 rium); the imago always escaping from the anterior end 

 through a circular orifice. Frontal lunule present; ptil- 

 inum usually present. Examples of this suborder are flesh 

 and horse flies, bots, drone flies, etc. Among these are but 

 few having aquatic larvae — a few Syi-phidae, some of the 

 Sciomyzidaei and other Acalyptrate Muscids. ...Cyclorrhapha 



1 See N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 47. 1901. p.577. 



