612 



NEUIIO1TERA. 



is very long and slender, and the wings are long, narrow and 

 densely veined. The larva (Fig. 603) bears a close resemblance 

 to that of Chrysopa. It makes a pitfall in fine sand at the bot- 

 tom of which it hides, leaving only the tips of its mandibles in 



sight, which are extended 

 and read}' to seize any 

 insect which may fall 

 into them. The pupa re- 

 tains the large mandibles 

 and uses them in cutting 

 its way out of its cocoon. 



Myrmeleon obsoletus Say (Fig. 604) is not rare in the warmer 

 parts of the country, and has been found at Salem, Mass., by 

 Dr. E. P. Colby. M. abdominalis Say has also been found as 



far north as Milton, Mass., by 

 Mr. J. Schoiield. Mr. R. Tri- 

 men, speaking of the Entomo- 

 Fig. 602. ~ ~ logy of Natal, South Africa 



(Entomological Monthly Magazine), notes the habits 

 of a "huge Myrmeleou, of the genus Palpares, the 

 spotted and variegated aspect of whose wings will 

 cause yon to mistake them for moths. . . . These 

 great insects are very unlike Libellulidcc in their 

 flight, flapping wildly and irregularly about, as if their Fi - c03 - 

 muscular apparatus were too weak to wield their stretch of 

 wings. In repose the wings are folded above each other so as 

 to form an acute-angled roof above the abdomen. They differ 

 in this respect from the long-horned Ascalaphi, which deflect 



the wings on either side, 

 and hold the abdomen 

 erect or nearly so." 



Ascalaphus with its 

 long filiform knobbed 

 antennae, and broad 

 wings and gay colors is 

 Fig> 60 *' the butterfly among Neu- 



roptera. It flies in the heat of the day, seeking the hottest 

 places and is abundant in the deserts of the East. The body 

 and feet are short and the large wings are less densely veined 



