June, igiS.] BaRBER : CONCERNING LyG-EID-E. 53 



Type — ^ "Arizona" (Coll. U. S. N. M.) ; Paratypes — one speci- 

 men in collection Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia and one J (my coll.) 

 both collected by Dr. Henry Skinner in Carr Canyon, Huachuca 

 Mts., Arizona. 



This species is generally paler than O. unicolor Uhler with the 

 terminal segment of the antenna not pale ringed at base. In Uhler's 

 species the width of the vertex of head is not more than twice that 

 of eye, the ocelli are placed almost midway between eyes and central 

 point of vertex, the eye viewed from the side is almost twice as 

 high as wide and plainly emarginate behind, and the head more 

 strongly contracted behind the eyes. 



Apparently Mr. Distant was unfamiliar with the genus Ozophora 

 as he made no mention of it in the Biologia Centrali-Americana and 

 erected two genera synonymous to it. Uhler properly placed Dis- 

 tant's Davila as a synonym of Osophora and it appears probable, 

 judging from the characters and illustration, that BaJboa will also 

 have to be referred to the above genus. 



Stygnocoris rusticus Fall, and pedestris Fall. 



The former of these two species has been recorded from North 

 America by Horvath, 1908. and from Oueliec by Van Duzee in his 

 recent Catalogue. In the collection of the U. S. N. M. is a specimen 

 from St. Johns, Quebec, and recently I have received a specimen from 

 Prof. H. M. Parshley taken at Truro. Nova Scotia. This species 

 has not yet been found within the United States but it should occur 

 in the mountainous parts of New England and New York. 



Still another European species, S. pedestris Fall., which has not 

 hitherto been reported from this continent must be added to our 

 fauna. I am indebted to Prof. Parshley for a specimen of this species 

 from Truro, N. S., and to Mr. Wm. T. Davis for one from Cape 

 Breton, N. S. Unlike the former species this has been found to occur 

 in the fauna of the United States as Prof. Carl J. Drake has taken 

 three specimens of it at Cranberry Lake, Adirondack Mts., N. Y., 

 Aug., 1917, and four specimens at Elka Park, Catskill Mts., N. Y., 

 Aug., 1917. This is a smaller paler brown, subshining species, with 

 the pronotum less closely punctate and quite pilose;' the lateral 

 margins of this part are lightly carinate. The legs are testaceous. 



