REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST 1914 249 



tapering, narrowly rounded. Palpi; one short, stout segment 

 strongly constricted basally. Mesonotum shining yellowish brown, 

 the submedian lines sparsely haired. ScuteUum reddish brown, 

 setose apicaUy, postscutellum fuscous yellowish. Abdomen thickly 

 haired, fuscous yellowish, the basal segments and genitalia fuscous. 

 Wings hyaline, costa fuscous yellowish. Hal teres yellowish basally, 

 fuscous apically. Legs a variable fuscous yellowish; claws long. 



Fig. 63 Rhopalomyia inquisitor; lateral view of last tarsal seg- 

 ment (a) and claw, and male (b) palpus, enlarged (original) 



slender, evenly curved, the pul villi longer than the claws. Geni- 

 talia; basal clasp segment long, stout; terminal clasp segment 

 swollen; dorsal plate short, stout, broadly and triangularly emar- 

 ginate; ventral plate long, broad, subtruncate. Harpes long, con- 

 volute, irregularly rounded. 



Female. Length 2 mm. Antennae extending to the fourth 

 abdominal segment, sparsely haired, pale yellowish; 19 segments, 

 the fifth with a stem three-fourths the length of the basal enlarge- 

 ment, which latter has a length one-half greater than its diameter; 

 terminal segment produced, tapering, acute. Palpi; one stout 

 segment constricted basally. Ovipositor as long as the abdomen, 

 the terminal lobes narrowly rounded. Other characters practically 

 as in the male. Type Cecid. ai75oa. 



Rhopalomyia racemicola 0. S. 



1862 Osten Sacken, C. R. Mon. Dipt. N. Amer., i: 196 (Cecidomyia) 

 1907 Beutenmueller, William. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bui. 23, p. 393-94 



1907 Felt, E. P. N. Y. State Mus. Bui. no, p. 120-21 



1908 N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 124, p. 364, 366 



1909 Ottawa Nat., 22: 246 



1909 Jarvis, T. D. Ent. Soc. Ont., 39th Rep't, p. 81 



1910 Stebbins, F. A. Springf. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bui. 2, p. 50 



The gall was first noticed by Osten Sacken in 1862 and subse- 

 quently the larva and gall were figured and described by 

 Beutenmueller. The gall is rather common about Albany and 

 Poughkeepsie, N. Y., and probably other places in New York State, 

 on Solidago canadensis. Adults were reared in early 

 October. Polygnotus and Torymus species were reared from this 

 midge. 



