694 MOSQUITOES OF NORTH AMERICA 



The characters of the adult are variable and do not distinguish Aedes vittcda 

 from its allies, stimulans, fitchii, abfitchii and sa-n^oni, and we know neither male 

 genitalia nor larvae. We therefore hold the species tentatively on the locality 

 solely. We have three specimens from the original lot from which Theobald 

 obtained his iype^material. One of them has the last joint of the hind tarsi all 

 black, while another has it distinctly white marked; the third specimen is 

 broken. The larvae credited to this species by Theobald in connection with the 

 original description do not belong to it and are obviously those of Culiseta inci- 



AEDES SYLVESTRIS (Theobald) Dyar & Knab. ^ U 



Cnlex stimulans Cockerell (not Walker), Proc. Davenport Acad. Nat Sci., vii, 150, 



1898 

 Culex stimulans Coquillett (not Walker), U. S. Dept. Agr., Div. Ent, Circ. 40, 2 ser., 



5, 6, 1900. 

 Culex stimulans Howard (not Walker), U. S. Dept. Agr., Div. Ent., Bull. 25, n. s., 



19, 20, 1900. 

 Culex stimulans Howard (not Walker), Mosquitoes, 81, 1901. 

 Culex sylvestris Theobald, Mon. Cullc, 1, 406, 1901. 



Culex stimulans Graenicher (not Walker), Bull. Wise. Nat. Hist. Soc, i, 33, 34, 1902. 

 Culex sylvestris Smith, Ent. News, xiii, 303, pi. xv, f. 10, 1902. 

 Culex sylvestris Dyar, Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, x, 196, 1902. 

 Culex sylvestris Dyar, Science, n. s., xvi, 672, 1902. 

 Culex sylvestris Dyar, Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., v, 142, pi. ii, ff. 1-3, 1903. 

 Gulex sylvestris Johannsen, Bull. 68, N. Y. State Mus., 421, 1903. 

 Culex sylvestris Smith, N. J. Agr. Exp. Stat., Bull. 171, 25, 1904. 

 Culex sylvestris Felt, Bull. 79, N. Y. State Mus., 289, 1904. 

 Ecculex sylvestris Felt, Bull. 79, N. Y. State Mus., 391c, 1904. 

 Culex sylvestris Dyar, Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., vi, 39, 1904. 

 Culex sylvestris Britton & Viereck, Rept. Conn. Agr. Exp. Stat., 1904, 268, 272, 273, 



1905. 

 Culex montcalmi Blanchard, Les Moustlques, 307, 1905. 

 Culex sylvestris Smith, N. J. Agr. Exp. Stat., Rept. Mosq., 248, 1905. 

 Ecculex sylvestris Felt, Bull. 97, N. Y. State Mus., 479, 1905. 

 Ecculex sylvestris Dyar, Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., vil, 47, 1905. 

 Aedes sylvestris Dyar & Knab, Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, xiv, 194, 1906. 

 Ochlerotatus sylvestris Coquillett, U. S. Dept. Agr., Bur. Ent., Tech. Ser. 11, 20, 1906. 

 Ochlerotatus sylvestris Dyar, U. S. Dept. Agr. Bur. Ent., Circular 72, 4, 1906. 

 Culex sylvestris Theobald, Mon. Cullc, iv, 405, 460, 1907. 

 Culex sylvestris Howard, Osier's Modern Medicine, i, 376, 1907. 

 Aedes sylvestris Dyar, Proc U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxii, 125, 1907. 

 Aedes sylvestris Knab, Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, xv, 216, 1907. 



Culex (Ochlerotatus) sylvestris Viereck, 1st Ann. Rept. Comm. Health Pa., 470, 1908. 

 Culex sylvestris Graenicher, Bull. Wise Nat. Hist. Soc, vii, 56, 57, 58, 1909. 

 Aedes sylvestris Thibault, Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., xii, 18, 1910. 

 Culex sylvestris Theobald, Mon. Culic, v, 347, 1910. 

 Aedes sylvestris Morse, Ann. Rept. N. J. State Mus., 1909, 718, 1910. 



Obiginal Description of Culex sylvestris: 



Thorax deep brown, with thin golden scales, pale in front of the scutellum. Abdo- 

 men with dusky brown to black scales, with basal bands of pure white, bent in in the 

 middle, last two segments with apical white bands as well. Liegs brown and black, 

 femora pale beneath and at the base, the metatarsi and some or all of the tarsi with 

 narrow pale basal bands. Fore and mid ungues of the ? equal, uniserrated; hind 

 equal, simple. 



?. Head dark brown, densely clothed in the middle with pale golden curved scales 

 and numerous upright forked ochraceous ones in front, similar black ones behind; 

 at the sides of the head is a patch of flat black, then flat white scales; antennae dark 

 brown, basal joint dark testaceous, base of the second joint bright testaceous; palpi 

 black scaled, the apex with white scales; clypeus dark brown; proboscis with very 

 dark brown scales, becoming jet black at the tip. 



Thorax deep brown, covered with thin curved hair-like golden scales, which 

 become almost white in front of the scutellum, with four rows of black bristles and 

 with a tuft of dark brown bristles over the roots of the wings; scutellum deep 

 brown, with pale curved scales and with a complex row of median border-bristles; 

 pleurae umber brown, with patches of white scales; metanotum chestnut-brown. 



