Vol. XXviii] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 369 



Indian Gall Midges (Cecidomyiidae, Dipt.). 



By E. P. Felt, Albany, New York. 



The writer has been privileged, through the courtesy of Prof. 

 Ramakrishna, of South India, to study two small collections 

 of gall midges reared or obtained from the vicinity of various 

 grasses. In addition to data given in a preceding paper,* we 

 would record the rearing of the rice or paddy gall midge, 

 Pachydiplosis oryzae Wood-Mason, from Panicum stagnimim, 

 and the capture of adults referable with very little question to 

 this species, in light traps. The specimens taken in early Octo- 

 ber, 1916, were heavy with eggs. Psciidhonnomyia fluvialis 

 Felt was reared, in addition to food plants previously recorded, 

 from Panicum punctatum, and both this species and the closely 

 related P. cornea are here referred to Dyodiplosis Rubs. Be- 

 low we describe one new species and all the stages of a very 

 interesting midge, the adults previously being unknown and ten- 

 tatively referred to OUgotrophus Latr. 



Hormomyia ischaemi Kieff. 



1910 Kieffer. J. J. Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Bull., No. 3, p. 71. 

 {OUgotrophus.) 



Adults and specimens of the gall of this insect, provisionally 

 referred to Hormomyia, were received from Prof. T. V. Rama- 

 krishna, Coimbatore, S. India, under date of November 9, 

 1916, accompanied by the statement that the insects were reared 

 from a gall on Ischacmum pilosum and were very likely iden- 

 tical with the species described from the larva and gall by Dr. 

 Kieffer as OUgotrophus ischaemi, which latter is probable 

 though not certain. The larva described by Dr. Kieffer, if this 

 species, is evidently a young stage, since the large size of the 

 midges preclude their developing from such a small full-grown 

 larva. 



(7a//. Length 11 to 18 cm., diameter 3 to 4 mm. This is a reddish, 

 cylindrical tube pointed at the apex and sheathed at the base by scale- 

 like leaves. The interior is hollow for practically its whole length 

 and emergence is through a small hole near the tip (characters in 

 part from L. A. Boodle, p. 70, /. c). 



Egg. Length .2 mm., ovate, cylindrical, whitish and apparently pro- 



* Ent. News 28 73-76. 



I 



