May, '07] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 1 85 



FEMALES. 



Front and vertex very sparsely and weakly punctured, shiny ; 9 mm. 



malvastri n. sp. 

 Front and vertex strongly punctured 1. 



1. Hind tarsi ferruginous 2. 



Hind tarsi black 3. 



2. Clypeus entirely black, no supraclypeal mark ; 8 mm. . innuptus Ckll. 

 Clypeus with a yellow mark combining with yellow supraclypeal spot ; 



8 mm • • renimaculatns Ckll. 



3. Wings smoky, nervures black ; smaller, 7 mm . . . ornatipes (Cress.). 

 Wings clear, nervures brownish ; larger, 8 mm. or over 4. 



4. Mesonotum finely punctured, sparsely so on disk ; clypeus separatedly 



and less coarsely punctured ; joint 3=4 + 5- • piercei Crawf. 



Mesonotum coarsely punctured ; clypeus coarsely puncto-striate ; joint 



3 exceeding 4 + 5 5- 



5. Nervures dark brown stigmalis n. sp. 



Nervures pale brownish-testaceous simulans n. sp. 



(The females of expallidtis and horizontalis are unknown — 

 possibly they are not distinguishable from sz'mu/ans and piercei.) 



Genus PSEUDOPANURGUS Cockerell. 

 1. Pseudopanurgus fuscipennis (Crawford). 



The only records of this bee are the two cotypes collected 

 by Mr. J. C. Crawford, at West Point, Nebraska, September 

 18 and 20, 1903, on Bidens chrysanthemoides. It is suggested 

 that this species is likely to prove the same as P. aethiops Cres- 

 son, but we have not been able to make a direct comparison, 

 so leave it as distinct. Protandrcnopsis Crawford, however, 

 is the same as Pseudopanurgus Ckll. 



Genus PROTANDRENA Cockerell. 

 1. Protandrena asclepiadls Cockerell. 



Entire State except in Transition zone of Sioux County; 

 West Point, Weeping Water, Cams and Dundy County, Ne- 

 braska, flying during July on Pctalostemon znolaceus, Solatium 

 rostratum, Mclilotus alba, Symphoricarpos occidentalis and 

 Mcdicago sativa, P. bancrofti Dunning, described from Colo- 

 rado, is the female of P. asclepiadis Ckll., and the species should 

 be known by the older name, as above. 



