THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 163 
pendaoe on the cephalic face densely beset with close, appressed 
spines. 
Habitat. — New Mexico. 
Holotype. — d^, Jemez Springs, New Mexico, altitude 6,400 
feet, August 21, 1916. (John Woodgate). 
Allotype. — 9 , with the type. 
Paratopotypes. — 2 d^cf. 
Genus Ulomorpha Osten Sacken. 
Ulomorpha sierricola, new species. 
Size large, wing of the male 9 mm.; stigma of the wing pale 
brown, distinct. 
Male. — Length 10 mm.; wing 9 mm. 
Described from an alcoholic specimen. 
Rostrum yellowish; palpi dark brown. AntenUcC rather long 
and filiform, dark brown; flagellar segments elongate-cylindrical 
with numerous long bristles that are somewhat scattered, on the 
basal flagellar segments arranged in two distinct verticils, but on 
the terminal' segments becoming much more scattered. Head 
dark brown above, paler beneath. 
Thoracic dorsum dark brown, the humeral region of the 
pra?scutum paler. Pleura dull yellow. Halteres brown. Legs 
with the coxae and trochanters dull yellow; femora dull yellow 
tipped with brown; tibige brownish yellow tipped with brown; 
tarsi dark brown. Wings with a strong, pale, brownish suffusion; 
stigma small, oval, brownish; veins brown; pubescence of the basal 
cells sparse and confined to the middle portions of the cells. 
Abdominal tergites dark brown, including the hypopygium. 
Venation: vein R^.+z very short to lacking so that cell Ri is very 
short-petiolate to sessile; cell Mi lacking. 
Abdominal tergites dark brown, including the hypopygium; 
basal sternites more yellowish. 
Habitat. — Washington. 
Holotype. — cf , Mt. Rainier, Washington. 
In its pubescent wings this species suggests Limnophila 
nigrilinea Doane, but this last-named form has the venation en- 
tirely different and the resemblance is superficial only. From 
Ulomorpha pilosella (O. S.) it may be distinguished by its con- 
