146 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM VOL. 91 
5. EUDEJEANIA SUBALPINA Townsend 
Eudejeania subalpina Townsend, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 43, p. 334, 1912 
' (Pert, 11,500 feet) ; Rev. Ent., vol. 1, p. 163, 1931. Genotype, by original 
'. designation. 
Budejeania pallida var. subalpina (Townsend) Encet, Zool. Jahrb., Abt. Syst., 
vol. 43, p. 291, 1920. 
Body color reddish brown or deep blood red, the disk of the mesono- 
tum centrally brown; parafacials, face, and cheeks light brown, only 
the facial ridges and a narrow portion of the parafacials near the 
eyes grayish; occiput grayish yellow, the hairs yellow; width of the 
male front at the vertex approximately one-third the width of the 
head (0.33 and 0.36 in two specimens available) ; female holotype with- 
out proclinate frontoorbital bristles; palpi deep black; antennae 
black, only the second segment tipped with yellow at the apex above; 
subepaulet orange; legs entirely reddish yellow, tibial and tarsal 
bristles and hairs the same; hind tibia with a row of 8-10 anterodorsal 
bristles of varying lengths; dorsal surface of the hind tibia not en- 
tirely glabrous, with 1 or 2 irregular rows for at least part of the 
length; large species, the body length 17-18 mm. 
I do not believe that subalpina is a variety of pallida Robineau- 
Desvoidy, at least in the sense of Engel (1920). Engel stated that 
the “typical” form of pallida had the tibiae covered with appressed, 
silvery-white hairs, which would place pallida (of Engel!) in an 
entirely different group of species than subalpina Townsend (cf. dis- 
cussion under £. pallida). 
Besides the female holotype and a male paratype, both in the 
National Museum, I have seen only one other specimen of subalpina, 
a male from “Cuesta von Cillutincara,” Bolivia, 3,000-8,200 m. (Fassl) , 
determined by Engel himself as Dejeania pallida Robineau-Desvoidy 
and undoubtedly one of the specimens of the same data recorded by 
Engel (1920, p. 292) as “pallida var. subalpina.” ‘Townsend stated 
that his two original specimens were males, but the one labeled “type” 
in the Museum collection is a female. 
6. EUDEJEANIA ALDRICHI, new species 
Species with bright reddish-yellow legs that contrast vividly with 
the dark body. 
Male, female.—Typical habitus and structure of Fudejeania, specifi- 
cally Aes acterized as follows: 
Head dark above, the frontal stripe black and the parafrontals dark 
brown, the remainder of the head smoky golden to brown; epistoma 
brown; occipital hair yellow, the long hairs below reddish yellow; 
palpi black to dark brown; antennae black, the second segment nar- 
rowly reddish at the apex, the third segment of the male not broadened 
