PLATE CXXXII. 



FOSSIL APHIDES. 



Aphis (?) longicaudatus. 

 Fig. 1. — Winged female. From Amberieux (Ain). 

 After Milliere. 



[M. Pierre Milliere, in 1853, published in the ' Ann. Soc. Ent. de 

 France,' 3 ser., t. i, pp. 9 — 11, pi. 3, fig. 2, a description of a fossil insect 

 which was embedded in the " Schiste Marneau," near Amberieux (Ain). 

 He calls it an antediluvian Aphis, and from " les deux appendices, places 

 a l'extremite de l'abdomen " (which are only cornicles), he styled it 

 Aphis longicaudatus.] 



Aphis (?) macrostyla. (Page 169.) 

 Fig. 2. — Winged viviparous female. 



Lachnus (?) bonneti. (Page 170.) 

 Fig. 3. — Winged viviparous female. 



Aphis (?) valdensis. (Page 118.) 

 Fig. 4. — Wing and apterous insect. 

 Fig. 5. — Shows these specimens in the matrix of the 

 natural size. Purbeck limestone. After Brodie. 



Aphis (?) delicatula. (Page 170.) 

 Fig. 6. — Portion of a winged female. 



Aphioides succifera. (Page 164.) 

 Fig. 7. — Apterous specimen from amber. After 

 Motschulsky. 



Lachnus (?) pectorosus. (Page 171.) 

 Fig. 8. — Winged viviparous female, a. Antenna. 



Aphis (?) morlotti. (Page 171.) 

 Fig. 9. — Winged female. 



Aphis (?) pallescens. (Page 170.) 

 Fig. 10. — Winged female. Fig. 10a. — Another 

 specimen. 



Lachnus (?). (Page 172.) 

 Fig. 11. — Fragmentary specimen. This and figs. 2, 

 3, 6, 8, and 9 are from Radoboj, after Heer. 



Pemphigus (?) bursifex. (Page 172.) 

 Fig. 12. — Ancient poplar leaf, from the (Eningen 

 beds, with a gall-like swelling, probably the work of a 

 Pemphigian Aphis, b. A magnified view. The small 

 puncture is supposed by Professor Heer to have been 

 formed by some gnat-like parasitic insect. 



