332 



PYG0LA3IPIS, Germ. 



1. I*. jyeGtoralis. 



Beduvius pectomVts, Say, Ins. of Lonisiaua, 11 ; Complete Writings, i, 306. 

 Fi/golamjyisftiscipennis, Stul, Ofvers. Akad. 1859, 379, No. 4. 

 FygoJampk pectoraJls, Uhler, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. 1871, 15. 



Inhabits Texas, California, Lonisiaua, Maryland, Florida, Massacliu- 

 setts, Cuba, and New York. 



2. P. serieea. ' > 



Pygolampis serieea, Stal, Ofvers. Yeteusk. Akad. Forhandl. 18.59, 380, No. 5. 

 Inhabits Texas, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina. 



Gnathobleda, Stal. 

 G. tumidida. 



Gnathohleda tumidida, Stal, Enuuieratio Hemixit. ii, 121, No. 3. 



Inhabits Texas, Cuba, &c. 



Stenopoda, Lap. 

 8. culiciformis. 



Cimex culic{formis, Fab., Syst. Eut. 728, No. 162; Species lus. ii, 376, No. 231. 

 Gerris culiciformis, Fab., Ent. Syst. iv, 189, No. 7. 

 Stowpoda ciiierea, Lap., Ess. 26, pi. 52, fig. 2. ^ 



Ste)iOj)oda culiciformis, Stal, Hemipt. Fabr., i, 129, No. 1. 



Inhabits Texas, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Cuba, Mexico, Indian 

 Territory, Panama, and Arkansas. 



Spilalonius, stal. 

 S. geniculatus. 



Spilalonius geniculatus, Stal, Euumeratio Hemipt. ii, 123, 1. 



Inhabits Texas. 



Naevesus, stal. 

 N. caroUnensis. 



Xai'vesus caroUnensis, Stal, Ofvers. Akad. Forhandl. 1859, 385, 1; Euumeratio 

 Hemipt., 124. 



Inhabits Texas, Missouri, South Carolina, and Cuba. • 



FA3IILY EMESID^E. 



Emesa, Fab. 

 E. longipes. 



Cimex 7o»r/)>fs, De Geer, Me'm. iii, 352, No. 326, pi. 35, figs. 16, 17. 



Ploiaria hreripennis, Say, Amer. Eut. iii, pi. 47 ; Complete Writings, i, 106. 



Emesa filum, G. R. Gray, Griffith's Auimal Kingdom, sv, 244, pi. 97, fig. 3. 



Emesa pia, Amyot et IServ., He'mipt. 394, No. 2; H.-Schf., Wauz. Ins. ix, 114, fig. 



937 ; Dohrn, Liunasa Eut. xiv, 231. 

 Emesa longipcs, Dohrn, Linutea Ent. siv, 221, No. 4; Uhler, Proc. Boston Soc. 



Nat. Hist. 1871, 15. 



Inhabits Texas, Pennsylvania, New York, Indiana, Illinois, and Con- 

 necticut. 



This species has, within a few years, spread into the region adjoining 

 Baltimore, living in the branches of small pine-trees and in out-houses 

 and barns. 



