SARCOPHAGA AND ALLIES 241 



"July 15, '74." Locality given in Riley's paper is 

 South Carolina. Reared from cups of Sarracenia 

 variolaris. 



Eight males, Summerville, S. C, reared by F. 

 M. Jones from cups of Sarracenia minor and flava; 

 emergence of adults was from July 27 to August 9, 

 1915. Eleven females reared in the same way prob- 

 ably include some of Sarcophaga jonesi. 



Two males, Theodore, Ala., reared by F. M. 

 Jones from cups of Sarracenia drummondi, June 23, 

 1916. 



Holotype.— Male, U. S. N. M. No. 20554, from 

 Summerville, S. C, reared August 9, 1915, from 

 Sarracenia minor. 



Allotype.— Female, U. S. N. M. No. 20554, 

 from the Riley collection and bearing the labels noted 

 above. 



It was probably a mere chance that the holotype 

 label of sarracenice was attached to the other species 

 in the National Museum, as this was the more abund- 

 ant one. The original Riley material also contained 

 specimens of S. jo7iesi, or three species in all. 



See notes on species reared from Sarracenia, with 

 table, under S. sarracenice. 



No. 114. Sarcophaga jonesi n. sp. 



Male. Indistinguishable from the male of rileyi 

 except by the genitalia, which show decided and con- 

 stant characters. As in rileyij, the second segment 

 of the hypopygimu varies from black to reddish- 

 brown. 



Forceps in profile rather slender, hollowed be- 

 hind on basal half,, tlien after a slight Immp curving 

 smoothly to a sharp tip, with dense, short hair from 

 hump to tip ; from behind they are broad and shining 

 at base and slightly concave nearly Iialfway, con- 

 tiguous to about the middle, then widening in a nar- 

 row V, the outer edges of the arms curving inward 

 to the sharp tips. Accessory plate brown, the distal 

 part flat and straight; posterior clasper slender, 

 black, curved, with slightly hooked tip; anterior 



