1896.] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 1 43 



Montandon. Ibid. No. 220. — New species of Dytiscidae collected in 



Darien by Dr. E. Festa, A. Griffini. Ibid. No. 224. — A new genus of 



Tabanidae collected in Darien by Dr. E. Festa, E. Giglio-Tos. 



13. La Naturaleza. Periodico cientifico de la Sociedad Mexi- 

 CANA DE HiSTORiA NATURAL (2), ii, 8. — New Mexican species of Trom- 

 bidium, A. Duges. 



14. CiCADiNEN (Hemiptera-Homoptera) von Mittel-Europa von Dr. 

 L. Melichar. 8vo., Berlin, Felix L. Dames, 1896. Price 20 Marks. — This is 

 a volume of 364 pages and 12 well-executed plates. The external anat- 

 omy and biology are discussed and directions for collecting and preser- 

 ving given, as well as the literature and a historical review of the subject. 

 Geographically, the work includes Austro-Hungary, the German Empire 

 and Switzerland. Fieber's division of the Homoptera into eight families 

 is accepted by the author, and the most of those families erected by J. 

 Edwards stand as subfamilies only. Each genus and species is fully de- 

 scribed and figured in detail, and keys to the genera and species are not 

 wanting. The synonymy is apparently also very complete. The work 

 is important to Hemipterology, and students of Homoptera will no doubt 

 find it indispensible. — F. 



15. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Division of Ento.mology, 

 Technical Series, No. 2. — The grass and grain joint-worm flies and their 

 allies : a consideration of some North American Pliytophagic Euryto- 



mina?, L. O. Howard. Ibid. No. ^. — The San Jos^ Scale, . . . L. O. 



Howard and C. L. Marlatt. Circular No. 14. — The Mexican cotton- 

 ball weevil, L. O. Howard. Ibid. — General work against insects which 

 defoliate shade trees in cities and towns, L. O. Howard. 



16. Twenty-si.xth Annual Report of the Entomological Society of On- 

 tario, 1895.— Insects injurious of the year 1895, J. Fletcher. The growth 

 of the wings of a Luna moth, J. A. Moffat. Observations on the season 

 of 1895, ibid. Variation, with special reference to insects, ibid. Some 

 Winter insects from swamp moss, W. H. Harrington. Birds as protec- 

 tors of orchards, E. H. Forbush. The Rocky Mountain locust and its 

 allies in Canada, S. H. Scudder. Seventh Annual Meeting of the Asso- 

 ciation of Economic Entomologist (these papers were previously noted 

 in these columns). 



17. Hatch Experiment Station of the Massachusetts Agricul- 

 tural College, Bulletin No. 36.— The imported elm-leaf beetle; Maple 

 Pseudococcus; Abbot Sphinx; San Jos^ Scale, R. A. Cooley. 



18. The Entomologist, April, i?>gS.— Per ip lane ia aiistralasice and 

 P. americana (illustrations), W. J. Lucas. Meteorological and other con- 

 ditions influencing the appearance of moths, B. N. Menshootkin. New 

 experiments on the seasonal dimorphism of Lepidoptera, A. Weismann 

 (translated from the German by W. E. Nicholson). Irrorhotides: a new 

 genus of Ateuchidae, . . . J. W. Shipp. Collecting in New England, W. 

 F. Fiske. 



