1914] Felt—Additions to the Gall Midge Fauna of New England 109 
ADDITIONS TO THE GALL MIDGE FAUNA OF NEW 
ENGLAND. 
By E. P. Fett, 
Albany, New York. 
Last year we prepared a list! of 187 New England species, a num- 
ber being characterized as new. Additional material has been 
received through the courtesy of Mr. C. W. Johnson of the Boston 
Society of Natural History, Mrs. A. T. Slosson of New York, 
and Miss Cora H. Clarke of Boston. Full data as to the origin of 
the material accompanies each description. 
Mr. Johnson captured a specimen of Asphondylia fulvopedalis 
Felt at Brattleboro, Vt., August 15, 1908, adding thereby another 
species to the list. 
Monardia lateralis sp. nov. 
Male: Length .75 mm. Antenne half the length of the body, thickly haired, 
dark brown; 13- and probably 14-segmented the fifth with a stem one-half the 
length of the tapering basal enlargement, which latter has a length nearly twice its 
diameter. Palpi; the first and second segments short, the third twice the length 
of the second. Mesonotum dark reddish brown. Scutellum, postscutellum and 
abdomen reddish brown. Halteres and legs mostly fuscous yellowish, the apical 
portion of the fourth and the fifth tarsal segments reddish brown. Claws strongly 
curved, finely denticulate, the pulvilli longer than the claws. Genitalia; basal 
clasp segment short, very broad, truncate distally; terminal clasp segment short, 
stout, broadly rounded apically and not reaching the median line. Harpes broad, 
irregular, heavily chitinized posteriorly, with the inner posterior angles produced 
in slightly curved, stout, conical processes extending in a postero-lateral direction. 
Type: Cecid. 1511. 
This species runs in our key to M. balsamicola Felt, from which 
it is easily separated by marked differences in the genitalia. It 
was received from C. W. Johnson, labeled Boston, Mass., May 10, 
Owen Bryant. 
Monardia multiarticulata sp. nov. 
Female: Length 3 mm. Antenne extending to the third abdominal segment, 
thickly haired, yellowish brown, with 29 and possibly more antennal segments, 
the fifth subsessile, disk-like, with a length about three-fourths its diameter and 
exceptionally large, irregular stemmed disks. The terminal segments are produced, 
the stem with a length nearly two-thirds that of the broadly pyriform basal en- 
1 Psyche, Vol. XX, pp. 133-47. 
