I50 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



cous. Wings hyaline, costa dark brown. Halteres pale yellowish. 

 Coxae and femora basally fuscous yellowish, the distal portion of 

 femora and tibiae dark brown, the tarsi nearly black ; claws slender, 

 strongly curved, the pulvilli longer than the claws. Genitalia ; basal 

 clasp segment long, slender ; terminal clasp segment stout ; dorsal 

 plate broad, broadly and roundly emarginate ; ventral plate broadly 

 and roundly emarginate. Harpes stout, tapering, irregular apicaily. 

 Female 1 . Length 2 mm. Antennae extending to the base of the 

 abdomen, sparsely haired, dark brown, yellowish basally; 16-17 

 sessile segments, the fifth cylindric, with a length about twice its 

 diameter; terminal segment produced, tapering to a narrowly 

 rounded apex. Palpi ; probably as in the male. Face fuscous yel- 

 lowish. Mesonotum yellowish brown, the submedian lines rather 

 thickly haired. Scutellum yellowish orange, postscutellum a little 

 darker. Abdomen sparsely clothed with short, yellowish hairs, dark 

 brown, the incisures, pleurae and venter reddish orange, the ex- 

 tremities of the abdomen and ovipositor yellowish. Ovipositor 

 nearly as long as the body ; terminal lobes with a length about three 

 times the diameter, narrowly oval. Type Cecid. ai895. 



Dasyneura eugeniae Felt 



1912 Felt, E. P. N. Y. Ent. Soc. Jour., 20:106 



The midges were reared from the fruit of Eugenia buxi- 

 folia collected at Key West, Fla., by E. A. Schwarz. 



Dasyneura vaccinii Smith 



1890 Smith, J. B. N. J. Agric. Exp't Sta. Bui. K., p. 31-37 (Cecid- 

 omyia vaccinii O. S.) 



1890 Cat. Ins. N. J., p. 369 (Cecidomyia vaccinii 



0. S.) 



1892 Fernald, C. H. Mass. Agric. Exp't Sta. Bui. 19. P- I34~35 (Ceci- 

 domyia vaccinii O. S.) 



1899 Johnson, C. W. Ent. News, 10:80 (C. oxycoccana proposed) 



1900 Ent. News, 11:324 (Cecidomyia oxycoccana) 



1908 Beutenmueller, William. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bui. 23, p. 392 



(Cecidomyia vaccinii O. S.) 

 1908 Felt, E. P. N. Y. State Mus. Bui. 124, p. 345 

 1910 Stebbins, F. A. Springf. Mus Nat. Hist. Bui. 2, p. 46 (Cecidomyia) 



This species is known to the cranberry grower as the tip worm. 

 The first sign of its presence, according to Doctor Smith, is the 

 unusual prominence of certain terminal buds accompanied by a cessa- 

 tion in the growth of the leaves. An examination discloses the 

 yellowish Cecidomyiid larvae within the affected bud. The tip 

 usually though not always dies. This midge causes considerable 

 injury to cranberry beds. 



