234 bulletin: museum of comparative zoology. 



Anoplius luctuosus (Cresson). 



B. Col.: Revelstoke, Selkirk Mts., 30 June, Carbonate, Columbia 

 River, 7-12 July; Orej^on: (^orvalHs; Calif.: Ingleside, 25 August, 

 Ukiah, Mendocino Co., 30 September 4^Vash.: Wenas Valley, Yakima 

 River, July, 1882. 



Anoplius compactus (Provancher). 



B. Col.: Glacier, DoA\'nie Creek, Selkirk Mts., 9 August; Calif.: 

 Sequoia National Park, 21-25 July. 



Anoplius selkirkensis, sp. nov. 



Type— Cornell l^niv. Coll. Parati/pc— M. C. Z. 10,398. 

 B. Col.: Downie Creek, Selkirk Mts., 14 August (Bradley). 



9 Black; densely long hairy; clypeus broad, truncate in front; no hair 

 under first joint of antennae, third joint very long, with the second fully equal 

 to vertex width; a groove above the antennae; hind ocelli closer to each other 

 than to the eyes; vertex slightly convex from in front; hind margin of pro- 

 notum angulate; metanotum with a median groove; abdomen not depressed, 

 venter and tip hairy; legs slender, spines short, those at tip of hind tibia not 

 one half diameter of the joint; inner spur of hind tibia a little more than one 

 half of the basitarsus; claws long, with a large tooth directed toward tip of 

 claw (not at right angles as in most species); last joint of hind tarsus with 

 stout spines beneath, wings dark, darker toward tips, the basal vein nearly 

 interstitial with the transverse, marginal cell hardly its length from wing-tip, 

 second and third submarginal cells subequal, the latter narrowed above, the 

 recurrents end beyond middle of the cells. 



Length 9 mm. 



The male is much smaller, more slender, more sericeous on face and 

 thorax, and without ventral tufts of hair. 



Distinct from other western species by longer third antennal joint, 

 and the sloping tooth of the claws. 



Anoplius tarsatus, sp. nov. 



Type. — Cornell Univ. Coll. Paratype.— M. C. Z. 10,399. 

 Calif.: Shenvood, Mendocino Co., 1 July, Sugar Pine, Madera Co., 

 4,300-5,000 ft., August (Bradley). 



