﻿Ecological Study of Hemiptera of Cranberry Lake Region 13 



has discussed the Palaearetic Hemiptera known to be established 

 in New England and added a number of species of Heteroptera, 

 which have been recently taken in New England, to Horvath's 

 list, and Knight* has treated quite carefully the species of Miridae 

 common to Nearctic and Palaearetic regions. Several species are 

 apparently of rather recent introduction by human agencies and 

 hence must be considered in a different class from those having 

 naturally holarctic range. 



Homoptera 



Pliilaenus leucophthalmus 

 Evacanthus acuminatus 

 Acucephalus nervosus 

 Acucephalus alhifrons 

 Deltocephalus abdominalis 

 Deltoceptalus pascuellus 

 ■fEuscelis striatulus 

 Euscelis ohsoleta 

 Empoasca flavescens 

 Empoasca smaragdula 



Euscelis striolus 

 Gicadula variata 

 Cicadula 6-notata 

 Balclutha punctata 

 Empoa tenerrima 

 Empoa lethierryi 

 Empoa rosae 

 Dikraneura fieberi 

 Alebra albostriella 



Heteroptera 



Sciocoris microphthalmus 

 Coriziis hyaiinus 

 Corizus crassicornis 

 Aradus lugubris 

 Gerris rufoscutellatus 

 Nysius ericae 

 Galeatus peckhami 

 Reduvius personatus 

 Nab is limb at us 

 Nabis ferus 

 Cimex lectularius 

 Miris dolobratus 

 Plagiognathus chrysanthemi 



Stenodema trispinosum 

 Teratocoris pallidum 

 Trigonitylus ruficornis 

 Stenotics binotatus 

 Poeciloscytus unifasciatus 

 Capsus ater 

 'Lygus pabulinus 

 Lygus apicalis 

 Lygus pratensis 

 Monalocoris filicis 

 Alecomma ambulans 

 Saldida pallipes 

 Callicorixa praeusta 



THE HEMIPTERA OF THE ADIRONDACKS 



The first records of the Hemiptera of the Adirondack Moun- 

 tains, published by MacGillivray and HoughtonJ in 1903, were col- 

 lected during June, 1901, in the vicinity of Axton at an elevation 

 of about 1,600 feet. This paper includes 53 species, 34 Heterop- 

 tera and 19 Homoptera respectively. A few years later Van 



* Knight, H. H. Nearctic Records for species of Miridae known heretofore only 

 from the Palaearetic Region (Heterop.) Can. Ent., Vol. LIII, Part 12, 1921, pp. 280- 

 288. (Published in Jan. 1922). 



t Euscelis striatulus and E. obsoletus of Horvath's list are separated by Van Duzee 

 as instablis and relativus respectively. 



X MacGiUivray, Alex. D. and Houghton, C. O. A list of the Insects in the Adirondack 

 Mountains, N. Y.— III. Ent. News, Vol. 14, pp. 262-265, 1903. 



