142 Psyche [October 



I.foliora Rssl. & Hkr., Amherst, Mass. Marginal leaf roll on oak 



leaves. 

 7. reflexa sp. nov., Hampton, N. H., S. A. Shaw. 

 I. rigidce Pack., Springfield, Mass., Miss F. A. Stebbins. 



A number of galls from which adults have not been reared have 

 been recorded from New England. These deformities have been 

 described and named as follows: 



Ceeidomyia bedeguar Walsh, celastri Stebb., citrina O. S., cro- 

 talarioe Stebb., eupatoriflorce Beutm., impatientis O. S., lappa 

 Stebb., majalis Bass., muscosa Stebb., niveipila O. S., ocellaris 

 O. S., pellex O. S., poculum O. S., potenti'h'caidis Stebb., pudibunda 

 O. S., racemi Stebb., reniformis Stebb., serotinw O. S., squamulieola 

 Stebb., iuba Stebb., renoe Stebb., and verrucicola O. S. 



A number of unnamed galls undoubtedly exist in New Eng- 

 land territory. 



Descriptions of New Species Listed Above. 



Monardia modesta sp. nov. 



This small midge was taken by Mr. H. L. Viereck at New 

 Haven, Conn., November 4, 1903. It is closely allied to M. alex- 

 anderi Felt from which it may be separated by colorational 

 characters, the more slender antennal segments and the equal 

 third and fourth palpal segments. 



Female. Length, .75 mm. Antennae hardly extending to the base of the abdo- 

 men, thickly haired, fuscous yellowish; 12 segments, the fifth pyriform, with a 

 length one-fourth greater than its diameter and a short, though distinct stem; ter- 

 minal segment fused with the preceding. Palpi, the third and fourth segments 

 equal. Body a nearly uniform brownish black. Legs mostly fuscous yellowish; 

 claws slender, evenly curved, the pulvilli as long as the claws. Ovipositor lobes 

 triarticulate, the basal segment irregular, trapezoidal, the second quadrate, with 

 a length two and one-half times its width, the third narrowly oval, setose apically. 

 Type: Cecid. 1468. 



Asynapta nobilis sp. nov. 



The female described below was received from Mr. C. W. 

 Johnson of the Boston Society of Natural History and labeled 

 Bridgeton, Me., August 25. It is easily destinguished from other 

 species of this genus by the long stems of the flagellate antennal 

 segments. 



