22 MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. 



quite prominently between the bases of the antennae; cheeks arched, 

 roughened, set with four spines on each, side arising from quite 

 prominent warts, the posterior pair the stoutest. Eyes medium in 

 size, not prominent, with small facets; one pair of long, prominent, 

 knobbed postocular spines. Ocelli large, distinct, subapproximate, 

 the anterior one directed far forward; all ocelli reddish yellow, with 

 dark red crescents. Mouth-cone long, sharply pointed, reaching to 

 the base of the prosternum. Antennse about one and one-half times 

 as long as head; segment 3 about one and one-half times as long 

 as segments 1 and 2 together; segments 3, 4, and 5 subequal in length, 

 the remaining segments appearing smaller. Segments 1 and 2 dark 

 reddish brown; segment 3 brownish white, darker at apex; segments 

 4, 5, and 6 darker, but lighter than segments 1 and 2, and lighter at the 

 extremities than in the middle; segments 7 and 8 nearly as dark 

 reddish brown as segments 1 and 2; spines long and conspicuous; 

 sense-cones on segments 3, 4, and 5 stout and long. 



Prothorax about twice as long as wide and a little more than one- 

 half as long as the head, with long, dark colored, knobbed spines on 

 the posterior and anterior angles, one pair midlatterally; also a pair 

 on the fore coxae. Mesothorax largest, wider than prothorax; 

 metathorax tapering gradually to abdomen, which is abruptly wider. 

 Wings slender, extending to middle of fifth abdominal segment, 

 lightly infuscated with brown, with three long, knobbed spines on the 

 anterior margin near the base of the fore pair of wings; both wings 

 with a stripe in the center extending past the middle of the wings, 

 the stripes brown in the posterior pair, transparent white in the 

 anterior pair. Legs long and stout; fore femora greatly enlarged, 

 with one long spine on the underside near the base; fore tarsi with 

 a large tooth near the middle. Legs nearly uniform, dark reddish 

 brown, except tarsi, wliich are light brownish white. 



Abdomen large and slender, wider than pterothorax, almost equally 

 wide but tapering slightly to the distal margin of the seventh segment; 

 remaining segments tapering more abruptly; first seven segments 

 lighter than rest of body; spines on segments one to eight knobbed, 

 except one pointed spine on the postero-lateral margin of each seg- 

 ment. Tube slightly more than two-thirds as long as the head, 

 with six long spines on the tip as long as the tube itself, and several 

 short ones; several very small spines on the dorsal surface. Ninth 

 abdominal segment with several long, pointed spines on the latero- 

 dorsal posterior margin and one pair of laiobbed spines. 



Near PMoeothrips minor Uzel in the shape of the antennae. 



One female, collected May 9, 1910, on peach foliage at Barnesville, 

 Ga. (E. L. Jenne.) 



Named for Mr. E. L. Jenne, of the Bureau of Entomology, who 

 collected it. 



