72 COQUILLETT 



National Museum show that it ranges northward to New Hampshire, 

 and also occurs in Washington. 



(Edoparea glauca sp. nov. 



Black, the halteres yellow ; head bluish gray pruinose, the entire 

 front brownish gray pruinose, only two vertical bristles (the anterior) 

 present, ocellar and postocellar bristles present, two pairs of fronto- 

 orbitals ; face in profile strongly concave, the clypeus unusually large 

 and projecting the length of the third antennal joint beyond the ante- 

 rior edge of the oral margin, cheeks posteriorly two-thirds as broad as 

 the eye-height, third joint of antennae orbicular; body bluish gray 

 pruinose, mesonotum largely brownish pruinose, five pairs of dorso- 

 central bristles, scutellum bearing three pairs of marginal bristles, pleura 

 and legs destitute of bristles except at apices of tibiae ; wings grayish 

 hyaline, stigma and base of costal cell yellowish gray, apex of first vein 

 opposite the hind crossvein ; length 6 to 7 mm. Four males and three 

 females. 



Habitat. Metlakahtla, June 4 ; Farragut Bay, Alaska, June 5. 



Type. Cat. no. 5254, U. S. National Museum. 



(Edoparea was founded by Dr. Loew in the Zeitschrift fur Ento- 

 mologie zu Breslau for 1859, page 10, and has for its type species the 

 Heteromyza buccata of Fallen. Dr. Loew draws attention to the 

 fact that in his original definition of the genus Heteromyza, Fallen 

 stated that the vibrissae are present, but as a matter of fact, this is true 

 of only one (oculatd) of the two species which he places in it ; oculata 

 therefore must be considered the type species of the genus Heteromyza. 

 About three years previous to the publication of Dr. Loew's article, 

 Rondani had selected buccata as the type of a new genus, to which he 

 applied the name Heterostoma, but upon discovering that this name 

 had been previously used for another genus, he changed it the follow- 

 ing year to Heterocheila. But this name was, in his opinion, too 

 near to the previously employed generic term, Heterocheilus, and, 

 accordingly, eleven years later he again changed it to Exocheila. As 

 the name proposed by Dr. Loew had been published about nine years 

 previously, it will, of course, take precedence over the name bestowed 

 by Rondani. 



Sciomyza glabricula Fallen. 



SciomysaglabriculaYALimx, Diptera Sueciae, Sciomyz,, p. 15, 1820. SCHINER, 

 Fauna Austriaca, Dipt., II, p. 44, 1864. 



Popof Island, Alaska : A single specimen, collected July 13. This 

 is a European species, not heretofore reported from this Continent. 



