SARCOPHAGA AND ALLIES 165 



J.; three females Wildwood, N. J. (Harbeck) ; five 

 males Horse Xeck Beach, Mass. ; one male New Bed- 

 ford, Mass.; one male Galveston, Texas (University 

 of Kansas) ; one male Virginia Beach, Va. (National 

 Museum, F. Knab, collector). Except where other- 

 wise stated, this material is all in the Hough collec- 

 tion. 



This species, I am informed, is found only on 

 sea beaches. It is named in honor of the eminent dip- 

 terist, C. W. Johnson, Curator of the Boston Society 

 of Natural History. 



Holotype.— Male, No. 20534, U. S. N. M., from 

 Virginia Beach, Va. 



Allotype. — Female, same number, U. S. N. M., 

 from Anglesea, N. J. 



No. 76. Sarcophaga ulig-inosa Kramer. 



Kramer, Entom. W'ochenbl., xxv, 152, 1908. — Europe. 



Bottcher, Deutsche Ent. Zeitsch., 1912, 732, fig. 

 Male. Front .180 of head (one specimen) ; 

 parafrontals and parafacials silvery, rather narrow, 

 the latter with the usual row of hairs, rather coarse 

 below; frontal bristles about 14, rapidly diverging 

 below, reaching the middle of the second antenna! 

 joint; ocellars as long as frontals; outer vertical bris- 

 tles not differentiated; antenna? brownish black; third 

 joint about 2l/^ times the second, reaching seven - 

 eighths of the distance to the vibrissae, which are on 

 the oral margin; arista rather long-plumose for three- 

 fifths of its length; bucca one-third the eyeheight; 

 ])alpi and proboscis black; back of head with three or 

 four rows of partly irregular black hairs and abund- 

 ant white ones. 



Thorax whitish pollinose, with the usual 3 to 5 

 black stripes ; the submedian gray stripes are narrow- 

 ly divided by a dark line before the suture; ps dc 

 four; ant acr slender, barely showing, no erect hairs 

 surrounding them; prsc well develo])e(l; stpl three; 

 bristles of the scutellum with two pairs of marginals, 

 one pair preapicals widely separated, and one pair 

 apicals. 



