the New Mexico Bees of the Genus Bombus. 387 



band between the wings; hair on anterior half of pleura 

 yellow, on posterior lialf black. Hair of the legs black, the 

 ends of the joints with short pallid pubescence, small joints 

 of tarsi with shining brown pubescence. Wings only mode- 

 rately dark, the costal margin narrowly suffused with fuscous, 

 especially towards the apex. First three segments of abdo- 

 men with black hairs, but the hlack is throughout mixed with 

 coppery red, or on the sides of the first segment wholly or 

 almost wholly pale fulvous or fawn ; fourth segment and 

 sides of fifth with yellow hair, quite long, forming a band ; 

 apex black. Ventral surface of abdomen with scanty black 

 hair. 



Hah. Beulah, New Mexico, May 30, 1899, at flowers of 

 Iris missouriensis ( W. Porter) . 



Allied to B. dubius, Cresson, but in that species the light hair 

 on the fourth abdominal segment is yellowish white and the 

 basal portion of the abdomen has not the reddish hairs. 

 Anotiier specimen oE B. iridis, taken at Monument Rock, 

 {Santa Fe Caiion, 8000 feet, at Budbeckia laciniata, Aug. 11 

 {Ckll. 4425), has the hair on the sides of the first abdominal 

 segment and somewhat on the second yellow or tawny, while 

 the third segment has a yellowish-fulvous apical band. 



Bomhus ferviduSj Fabr., 1798. 



Las Vegas, N. M., July, $ {Ckll 3705) ; Las Vegas, at 

 flowers of P etaiostemon Candidas , Aug. 11, ^ (IF. Porter). 

 White Mts., N. M., Rio Ruidoso, about 6700 feet, at flowers 

 of Vicia near pulchella, July 29^ 1 2 {Townsend). Appa- 

 rently scarce in New Mexico. 



Bombus monardte^ sp. n. 



Resembles fervidus, but the yellow is not so bright, the 

 third submarginal cell is more narrowed above, and the hair 

 of the face and vertex is yellow, witli some bhick on the sides 

 of the vertex and on the front. The pubescence is rather 

 longer and looser than in Jervidus^ borealis, or sonorus ; the 

 hair on the pleura is yellow, not black as in borealis and 

 sonorus ; the wings are only stained with brown, not dark 

 brown as in sonorus. 



Hob. Monument Rock, Santa Fc Canon, N. M., 8000 feet, 

 at flowers of Monarda {GUI. 4445); Rio Ruidoso, White 

 Mts., N. M., 6500-6600 feet, July 25 to Aug. 1. iSix at 

 flowers of Monarda stricta, one at Potentilla Timrheri, one at 

 Allium cernuum {C. II. T. Towns6nd). 



