REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST 1900 I13 
Rhabdophaga absobrina n. sp. 
Male. Length 2.5mm. Antennae extending to the base of the 
abdomen, thickly clothed with long whitish hairs, dark brown, 19 
segments. Face dark brown; mesonotum dark brown with distinct 
sublateral and submedian rows of golden yellowish hairs; scutellum 
and postscutellum reddish brown. Abdomen dark brown, rather 
thickly clothed laterally with silvery white hairs in whitish patches. 
Legs a variable brown, lighter ventrally; tarsi dark brown. 
Taken on maple and other trees and shrubs at Albany, N.Y. 
May 17, 1906. 
Type Cecid. 40, N.Y. State Museum. 
Rhabdophaga consobrina n. sp. 
Male. Length 3mm. Antennae shorter than the body, sparsely 
clothed with fine hairs, dark brown, 19 segments. Mesonotum 
dark brown, the submedian lines rather thickly clothed with dark 
hairs. Scutellum dark brown, thickly clothed with yellowish white 
hairs; postscutellum reddish anteriorly, dark brown posteriorly. 
Abdomen dark brown, sparsely clothed with whitish hairs; legs 
dark brown, lighter ventrally; tarsi darker. 
Taken near maple and other trees and vines at Albany, N.Y. 
May 17, 19006. 
Type Cecid. 39. N.Y. State Museum. 
Rhabdophaga annulata n. sp. 
Female. Length 1 mm. Antennae a little shorter than the 
body, thickly haired, dark brown, fuscous yellowish basally, 14 seg- 
ments. Face fuscous yellowish; mesonotum dark brown, sub- 
median lines yellowish; scutellum dark brownish, fuscous apically; 
postscutellum yellowish. Abdomen dark yellowish, basal segments 
fuscous dorsally, terminal segments tinged with pale orange. Coxae 
and femora pale orange. The latter fuscous distally; tibiae pale 
straw variably tinged with carmine; tarsi light brown. 
- Taken on goldenrod or aster at Albany, N.Y. July 6, 1906. 
Type Cecid. 514, N.Y. State Museum. 
Rhabdophaga borealis n. sp. 
Female. Lengthi1.5;mm. Antennae nearly as long as the body, 
sparsely haired, light brown, probably 14 segments. Face dark yel- 
, lowish; mesonotum dark brown, lighter posteriorly, submedian lines 
