104 



THE MOSQUITOES OF NEW JERSEY 



Fig. XXXII. Adult of Walker's Anopheles. Anopheles walkeri Theob. 



States describe An. walkeri as resembling An. punctipennis very 

 closely. They state that An. walkeri has the "inner clypeal hairs with 

 sparse minute feathering toward tip ; hair of prothorax with three to 

 five strong branches from near base. (Hair on abdominal segments 

 comparatively large, with three to seven branches ; palmate hairs on 

 segments one and two partially developed ; antepalmate hairs on seg- 

 ments four and five usually single, sometimes double or triple.)" An. 

 punctipennis differs from An. walkeri in having "the inner anterin 



