CATALOGUE OF NORTH AMERICAN DIPTERA. 4I9 



funebris Austen. Annals and ^Nlag. Nat. Hist., ser. 6, xv, 378, pi. xiii, f. i. lb. — 

 Trinidad. W. I. ; larva in Spiny Rat. Lonclicrcs Guicuuc. Quotes cir- 

 cular by Hart, Botanical Dept.. Trinidad, on rearing tbe larvse. 

 histrio Coquillett, Proc. U. S. N. M., xxv, 103. — Guanaxuato. }^Iex. 

 horripilum Clark, Essay on Bots, 70, pi. 11, f. 27. — Savannah, Ga. 

 Wiedemann, Auss. Zw., ii, 257 {Trypodcnua). — Ga. 

 Waxker, List, III, 683, oc. in Nova Scotia. 

 Brauer. JNIon. GEstriden, 235, pi. iv and vr. — N. Y., Ga. 

 Lugger. 2d Rept. Ent. Minn., 1896, 229, fig., no desc. — Minn. 

 See also cjuiicitli. 

 latifrons Coquillett, Canad. Ent.. xxx, 10. — Los Angeles Co., Cal. 

 leporivora Coquillett. Canad. Ent., xxx, 9, 10 (Icpk'ora). — Cal., Wyo. ; bred 

 from the cotton-tail rabbit. 

 Johnson, Ent. Neva's, xii. 293, oc. at Beulah, N. M. 

 Coquillett, Proc. U. S. N. M., xxv, 104, important addition to desc. 

 Beulah, N. M. — Skinner, 

 lepusculi TowNSEND, Ps3-che. 1897, 8, desc; Psyche, 1892, 299, description of 

 larva from cotton-tail rabbit; Insect Life, v, 319, refers larva to fou- 

 fiiicUa Clk. — New Mexico and Colorado. 

 Austen, Annals and ^lag. Nat. Hist., ser. 6, xv, 384, shows that Town- 

 send's species is not foiitiiiclla. 

 nitida Coquillett, Canad. Ent., xxx, 10. — Los Angeles Co., Cal. 



Town SEND, Psyche, 1898, 268, oc. in N. M., and notes. 

 polita Coquillett, Canad. Ent., xxx, 10. — National Park. Wyo. 

 scutellaris Brauer, Mon. CEstriden, 230, pi. iv and vi. — N. A. Wash. — J. 'SI. A. 

 similis Johnson, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, xxix, loi. — Beulah. N. M. 

 sterilator Lugger, 2d Rept. Ent. Minn., 227-229. fig. — Minn. ; larva supposed to 



live in scrotum of ground-squirrel, Spcrtiwpliilus irL-dcciinHiicatiis. 

 tenebrosa Coquillett. Canad. Ent.. xxx, 11. — Col., Cal, Ore. 



Piedmont. S. D.— J. M. A. 

 terrisona Walker, see atrox. 



DERMATOBIA. 



Brauer, Verb. Zool.-Bot. Ges., i860; jNIon. Qistriden. 251, 1863. 

 No North i\merican species have been described. The following papers 



relate to this genus : 



Say, " On the South American species of (Estrus, which inhabits the 

 Human Body," Jour. Acad. Sci. Phil, 11, 354, 1822; Compl. Works, 11, 

 32. 



Rudolph Matas, M.D., paper by. on species infesting man in New Or- 

 leans; reprinted, with figs., in Insect Life, i, 76. 



OsBORN, Insect Life, i, 226, quotes another account from Miss. 



Townsend, Psyche, Aug., 1892, 299, describes a larva from Lcpus cal- 

 iotis; afterward refers it to Bogcria, q. v. 



TACHINID.E. 



Note. — The classification adopted follows closely that of Coquillett. Revision 

 of the Tachinidse, Bulletin of Division of Entomology, Technical series, No. 7, 

 1897. This work seems to embody a far clearer and more consistent idea of 

 the genera than any other general work on the American species of the family. 

 It includes, however, only the fauna of the United States, and that no farther 

 than seen bv the author. This has necessitated mv adding a large number cf 



