5oS NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



I took at Salem one specimen which agrees much better with 

 this species than with alternatus. Previous records 

 place the species west of the Mississippi river. 



Genus agallia Curtis 



Agallia 4-punctata Prov. 



Bythoscopus 4-punctatus Prov. Nat. Can. 1872. 4: 376 

 Agallia 4-punctata Van Duzee. Am. Ent. 1889. 5: 167 

 Agallia 4-punctata Van Duzee. Buf. Soc. Xat. Sci. Bui. 5, 

 p. 196 



Records for Poughkeepsie [X. Y. State coll.], Ithaca [Cornell 

 coll.], Buffalo [Van Duzee], Forest Park, June 7, 1902 [Bueno]. 



I collected it at Cold Spring Harbor and Jamaica; Van Duzee 

 at Lake Placid in 1904. 



Agallia sanguinolenta Prov. 



Bythoscopus sanguinolentus Prov. Xat. Can. 1S72. 



4: 376 

 Agallia sanguinolenta Van Duzee. Am. Ent. 1S89. 5: 166 

 Bvthoscopus siccifolius Uhler. U. S. Geol. & Geog. Sur. 



Bui. 2, p. 359 

 Agallia si cci folia \an Duzee. Can. Ent. 1889. 21: 9; Buf. 



Soc. Xat. Sci. Bui. 5. p. 196 



Generally distributed over the State as well as elsewhere over 

 the United States. Records for Ithaca [Cornell Univ.], Buffalo 

 [Van Duzee], Kamer [X. Y. State coll.], Mosholu, Oct. i, 1902. 

 [Bueno]. 



I collected it at Eagle Bridge. X'assau, Jamaica and Cold Spring 

 Harbor, and Mr Van Duzee reports it for Lake Placid, Phoenicia, 

 Staten Island and Jamaica. 



AgalUa novella Say 



Jassus novellus Say. Acad. X'at. Sci. Phila. Jour. 1831. 6: 309 

 Agallia novellus Van Duzee. Can. Ent. 21: 8 ; Buf. Soc. Xat. 

 Sci. Bill. 5. p. 196 



Reported for Buffalo Van Duzee, Btif. Hemip. p. 196. 



Recorded for Buft'alo and reported in 1904 for Lake Placid and 

 Phoenicia but doubtless w^ell distributed over the State. 



AgaUia constricta Van Duzee 



Can. Ent. 26: 90; Osbom and Ball, Dav. Acad. Xat. Sci. Proc. 7: 52^ 



Aside from the record of Long Island given in the review of 

 this genus by Osbom and Ball, I have specimens collected at 

 Cold Spring Harbor in August 1904, and Mr Van Duzee reports 

 it for Staten Island. Its distribution is evidently to the south- 

 ward and Long Island is probably about its northern limit. 



