1906] 
BASKS— THREE SEW SPECIES OF SEUROPTERA 
99 
Longinos Navas has published a C. marginalis a few months before me in the 
Bol. Soc. Aragon. Cienc. Nat., I\’., May 1905. 
Psammoleon gutlipcs n. sp. 
Myrniclcon ingeniosiis Hagen, Syn. Neur. X. America, p. 236, 1861, not 
of Walker. 
Walker's type of Mynneleon ingeniosus is from Brazil. It has a much 
narrower pronotum, the thorax is more spotted, the abdomen more banded 
with pale, and the legs not sprinkled with black dots ; I therefore propose a 
new name for our species. Hagen had already noticed these differences in 
i860, but had few specimens ; since then it 'has been found that these forms 
are more constant in markings than formerly supposed. 
Suhpalasca floridana n. sp. 
Head brown, clypeus and mouth-parts yellowish; vertex with dark brown 
hair, face with two rosettes of long, dark brown hair each side ; antennae pale, 
narrowly annulate with brown, club dark brown ; thorax brownish ; legs pale, 
tips of the tibiae and of all tarsal joints black, spines black. Abdomen brown, 
segments 4, 5 and 6, with a narrow, curved black stripe on each side above, 
margined with yellow ; tip each side with a yellow spot containing a black dot 
on posterior edge ; male appendages pale, scarcely one-half the length of the 
last dorsal segment, depressed. Wings hyaline, venation pale brownish, 
pterostigma pale brown. Structure similar to S. hyalina. 
Expanse 50 mm. 
One male from Southern Florida. Differs from S. hyalina at once by the 
dark hair on face, as dark as that on vertex. Dr. H. W. van der Weele, who 
is making a special study of this family, writes me that our species of Ulula 
{Uiulodes Currie) belong to the genus Suhpalasca. 
Panorpa virginica n. sp. 
Pale yellowish; antennae black, except the basal joints; abdomen brown, 
apex yellowish. Wings hyaline, faintly yellowish on basal part ; a rather 
broad apical band ; a narrow, geniculate pterostigmatical band ; an interrupted 
basal band of two equal spots ; three basal spots, the central one the largest, 
a costal spot beyond basal band ; and a posterior marginal spot between 
pterostigmatical and apical bands. In hind wings only the three bands 
distinct. Subcosta runs into the pterostigma ; wings not very long. Sixth 
abdominal segment of the male rather short, with a large, high, curved horn 
