228 



he had not observed it, and should have been deceivedby a little 

 bundie of hairs. I confess that in average the shape is like that 

 of Ereynetes or Tydeus; also the absense of long hairs apparently 

 is somewhat strange, though we know a few species with only a 

 few long hairs, e. g. GL prunorum Hering, or even with short 

 hairs, e. g. GL platy gaster Michael, GL dispar Michael, the allied 

 Labidophorus talpae Kramer, and Dermacarus sciurinus (C. L. Koch). 

 I think we must patiently wait till the Acarus hyalinus is found 

 again. 



14. Glycyphagns cubicularius (C. L. Koch). 



1841 Acarus cubicularius C. L. Koch, Deu. Cr. Myr. Ar., fase. 



32, n° 23. 



1842 C. L. Koch, Ueb. Arachn. Syst., v. 3, p. 119. 



1863 Andersen, in Ofv. K. Vet. Akad. Forh., p. 188. 



1864 Kirchner, in Lotos, p. 76. 



1867 Glyciphagus cubicularius Fumouze et Robin, in Journ. Anat. 



Physiol., p. 44 (sép.) 

 1877 Acarus cubicularius Canestrini et Fanzago, in Att. R. Ist. 



Ven. Sc. Lett. Art., ser. 5, v. 4, p. 131. 



1881 Halier, in Mitth. Schweiz. Entora. Ges., v. 6, p. 151. 



Hitherto it seems that this spesies is found in Germany, Norway, 

 Austria and Italy. Remarkakle is the fact that Canestrini and 

 Fanzago record this species as found in Italy (1877), and that the 

 former does not make any mention of it in his Tiroglijidi (1888) 

 and in his Prospetto dell' Acarofauna Italiana, v. 3 (1888)! 



15. Glycyphagus setosus (C. L. Koch). 



1841 Acarus setosus C. L. Koch, Deu. Cr. Myr. Ar. fase. 33, n° 3, cf. 



1842 C. L. Koch, üeb. Ar. Syst., v. 3, p. 119. 



1859 Grube, in Arch. Nat. Liv-, Ehst-, Kurl., ser. 2, v. 1, 



p. 465. 



1867 Fumouze et Robin, in Journ. Anat. Physiol., p. 44 (sép.) 



1903 Glycyphagus setosus Oudemans, in Entomologische Berichten, 



p. 102. 



