164 JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY AND ZOOLOGY 



iu tlie woods of Minnesota. They lia\'e Ijeen reported from 

 Finland, Scandinavia, Bolieniia, Germany and Minnesota. 



Genus Pseudosira Scli(')tt, Borner 



This is a scaled genns similar to Fintomohrya, one species is 

 found here, and has been descril)ed l)y Lu])l)ock from England. 

 They seem to live in mucli dryer i)laces than the other 

 Collembola. 



Pseudosira doniestica Nicolet 



Degeeria doniestica Nicolet, Rech. p. s. a 1' hist. d. Pod., 1842, 



p. 76. 

 Seira doniestica Lubbock, Monograph, 1873, p. 144. 

 Pseudosira domestica Gollinge and Shoebotham, jr. econ. 1)iol, 



V, 1910, p. 115. 



Description: Length — 2.65 mm. Color — Steel blue with some 

 brown. Antennae — Slender, long; I shortest, II and III sub- 

 equal ; IV not quite twice as long as III l)ut little over twice as 

 long as I. Ocelli — Sixteen. Claws — Two, both slender, 

 superior three teeth, inferior unarmed ; tenent hair on tibia. 

 Furcula — Long and slender, dentes plus mucrones longer than 

 manubrium, dentes serrated ; mucrones, one tooth with basal 

 spine. Abdominal segments unequal; IV almost three times as 

 long as III. 



Variation : Those described by Collinge had no basal spine 

 while mine have. 



Habitat: Found under a rotten log in fairly dry sand in 

 Cucamonga Canyon. Nicolet in describing this species, says 

 that it is found in houses and is very rare. Collinge found it 

 on and under flower pots in a greenhouse. 



Family PODURID.E 



This family is a large one and is less specialized and more 

 primitive than the Fntomobrya. The antennae are short and 

 many of them have sense bulbs at the end. Ringed antennie 

 are entirely unknown. The claws show reduction. In some 

 genera the inferior claw is little more than a bristle, while in 



