SARCOPHAGA AND ALLIES 105 



ferentialis by W. E. Pennington (Webster No. 

 13535); one male Wellington, Kan., E. G. Kel- 

 ly, (Webster No. 7398) ; two pairs reared from 

 Mclanoplus atlaim at Brawley, Cal., by T. D. 

 Urbahns (his No. 1653) ; one female Three Rivers, 

 Cal.; one male Moscow, Idaho; one female Kaslo, B. 

 C, Aug. 17, A. N. Caudell, collecter; one female Wil- 

 liams, Ariz., May 29, H. Barber collector; one male, 

 Melrose Highlands, Mass., July 30, 1912, H. E. 

 Smith collector; one male Hinckley, Ohio, June 29, 

 1901, J. S. Hine, collector; one male Manahawkin, 

 N. J., July 5, 1909, Harbeck; one female Lucaston, 

 N. J., Harbeck; two males and one female Pocono 

 Lake, Castle Rock and Germantown, Pa. Harbeck ; 

 one male without locality (Webster No. 6299) ; three 

 females, reared from codling moth at Roswell, N. 

 Mex., Dec. 9, 1912 (Quaintance No. 6208). 



Types.— In Hough collection and University of 

 Kansas. 



This species, as will be seen, has been repeatedly 

 reared from grasshoppers and occurs throughout 

 most of the United States. Kelly's article mentioned 

 above records rearing from grasshoppers in several 

 places. I find that the material there mentioned from 

 Wilson Creek, Wash., is opifera and not hunteri. 



No. 42. Sarcophaga spatulata n. sp. 



Male. Front narrow, .136 of head; frontals 10, 

 the anterior opposite middle of second antennal joint 

 and moderately divergent; face and front gray polli- 

 nose, not very silvery; parafacial with rather irregu- 

 lar row of the usual coarse black hairs; antennse 

 brownish-red, third joint one and two-thirds times as 

 long as the second and reaching four-fifths of the way 

 to the vibrissa", which are perceptibly above the oral 

 margin; arista black, rather long; plumose only to the 

 middle; a few scattered hairs extend nearly lialfM^ay 

 up the facial ridges; bucca over one-fourth the eye- 

 height, the hairs coarse and black, edge of mouth with 

 bristles along the sides; palpi yellow; proboscis 



