CATALOGUE OF NORTH AMERICAN DIPTERA. 555 



Zetterstedt, Dipt. Scand., iv, 1536 {Aricia Uoralis Meig. non Fallen). 



Harris, Cat. Animals of Mass., 80, 1835; Ins. Inj. to Vegetation, 1841, 

 494 (Anthomyia raphani). — Mass.; larvse in radishes. 



Curtis, Farm. Insects, i860, 141, fig. (Anthomyia radicum Linne). 



ScHiNER, Fauna Austr., i, 646 (Anth. Uoralis Meig., from a Zetterstedt 

 specimen). 



Fitch, iitli N. Y. Rept., 59-61 and 40-43 (Anth. raphani and brassiccs). 



LiNTNER, ist N. Y. Rept., 184-191, habits, figs., etc.; 5th Rept., 157, reme- 

 dies.— N. Y. 



Riley, Dept. Agric. Rept., 1884, 319-321, life hist., etc.; pi. viii, f. 5 (Anth- 

 omyia). 



Slingerland, Bull. 78, Cornell Univ. Ag'l Experiment Station, 1894: an 

 admirable treatise on this insect from the biological, economic and sys- 

 tematic standpoints; many illustrations, full bibliography, etc. Perhaps 

 the best entomological bulletin yet issued from an American agricul- 

 tural experiment station. 



Meade, Desc. List Brit. Anth., 48 (^occo^a).— England. 



Fletcher, Rept. Ent. and Bot., 1898, larvae in turnips in Alberta. 



Stein, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., xlii, 236, oc. in Ont. and Mass. (Chortophila 

 Aoccosa). 



Chittenden, Bull. 2>2„ "• sen, Div. of Ent., 80, larvae in celery. 

 Note— This, species, commonly called the Cabbage Maggot, infests in 



its larval stage the roots of cabbage, radish, cauliflower, turnip, winter 



cress, hedge mustard, celery, and doubtless other plants. 

 ceparum Meigen, Syst. Beschr., vi, 376, 1830 (Anthomyia) .—Emo^t; larvae in- 

 festing onions. 



Bouche, Naturgeschichte d. Garten-Insekten, i, y2> (id-)- 



Schiner, Fauna Austr., i, 643 (as syn. of Anth. antiqua Meig.). 



Fitch, nth N. Y. Rept., 487-494 (sep. 31-38), habits, etc. (Anthomyia).— 

 N. Y. 



Walsh, Amer. Entomologist, 11, no, fig. 72 (id.). 



Lintner, ist N. Y. Rept., 172-181, bibliog., habits, remedies, etc. 



Slingerland, Bull. 78, Cornell Univ. Ag'l Experiment Station, 495, figs. ; 

 biology, desc, etc. — N. Y. 



Smith, Ent. News, viii, 101-104; habits, remedies, etc. 



N. J. — Smith Cat. (antiqua). 

 cilicrura Rondani, see fusciceps. 

 [cilioraca, mentioned by Hagen, Canad. Ent., xiii, 50, as recognized from N. A. 



by Loew, must be only a misprint for cilicrura.] 

 cinerella Fallen, Muscides, yy (Musca).—!^. Europe. 



Zetterstedt, Ins. Lapp., 686 (Anthomyza) ; Dipt. Scand., iv, 1611 (Aricia). 



Rondani, Dipt. Ital. Prod., vi, 220. 



Meade, Desc. List, 45 (Chortophila) . 



Stein, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., xlii, 235, oc. in la., Ida., S. D., Mass., Ont., 

 111. (id.). 



LuNDBECK, Dipt. Grcenl., 11, 284, oc. in Greenland (id.). 



Webster, Canad. Ent., 1900, 212, reared from wheat plants in Ohio. 



Howard, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., 11, 583, fig. and habits ; bred from human 

 excrement in D. C. and Va. 



N. J. — Smith Cat.; Montreal— Chagnon (both Chortophila). 

 fabricii Holmgren, Ins. Nordgroenl., loi (Aricia). — Greenland. 



Coquillett, Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., 11, 451, oc. in Alaska and White Mts.. 

 N. H. (Hylemyia). 



