84 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [March, '20 



ject of Arthropod structure and classification is summed up in Sir Ray's 

 essay in vol. 47 (1904) to which G. H. Carpenter's notes on the segmenta- 

 tion and phylogeny of the Arthropoda in vol. 49 (1905) is a fitting pendant. 



We may also include the series of memoirs on Peripatiis, 

 "no less famous in the annals of the Journal." 



A preceding number of the Journal (April, 1919) contained 

 a brief article by Sir Ray on the "Terminology of Partheno- 

 gensis" in which the case of the "greenflies or Aphides" is 

 used as an illustration. 



It is not often that an editor is still active after fifty years' 

 association with the same journal and we may fittingly join 

 the British zoologists in offering Sir Ray our "cordial congratu- 

 lations on the achievements of past years coupled with best 

 wishes for those that are to come." 



Notes and Nevw^s 



ENTOMOLOGICAL GLEANINGS FROM ALL QUARTERS 

 OF THE GLOBE 



Pseudagenia capella nom. nov. (Hym., Psammocharidae) 



In "Philippine Wasp Studies" (Bull. No. 14, Ent. Ser.; Report of the 

 Work of the Experiment Station of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Associa- 

 tion, Published in Honolulu, Hawaii, December 31, 1919), on pages 45 

 and 46, I described a psammocharid wasp under the name of Pseudagenia 

 caerulescens, and further referred to the species on page 100. As caerul- 

 escens has long ago been used by Dahlbom for the specific name of an Ameri- 

 can wasp belonging to the genius Pseudagenia, my Philippine species is a 

 homonym and its name must be changed. I therefore change the name of 

 my Philippine species from Pseudagenia caerulescens Williams to Pseuda- 

 genia capella Williams. — Fran'CIS X. Willi.\ms, Honolulu, Hawaii. 



Kntomological Literature. 



COMPILED BY E. T. CRESSON. JR., AND J. A. G. REHN. 



Under the above head it is intended to note papers received at the Academy of NaturaJ 

 Sciences, of Philadelphia, pertaining to the Entomology of the Americas (North and 

 South), including Arachnida and Myriopoda. Articles irrelevant to American ento- 

 mology will not be noted; but contributions to anatomy, physiology and embryology of 

 insects, however, whether relating to American or exotic species, will be recorded. 



The numbers in Heavy-Faced Type refer to the journals, as numbered n the following 

 list, in which the papers are published. 



All continued papers, with few exceptions, are recorded only at their first installments. 



The records of papers containing new species are all grouped at the end of each Order 

 of which they treat. 



For records of Economic Literature, see the Experiment Station Record. Office of Ex- 

 periment Stations. Washington. Also Review of Applied Entomology, Series A, London. 

 For records of papers on Medical Entomology, see Review of Applied Entomologj', Series B. 



4 — Canadian Entomologist, London, Canada. 7 — Annals of The En- 

 tomological Society of America, Columbus, Ohio. 15 — Insecutor In- 

 scitiae Menstruus, Washington, D. C. 16 — The Lepidopterist, Salem, 

 Mass. 17 — Lepidoptera, Boston, Mass. 39 — The Florida Buggist, 



