326 DIPTERA OF NORTH AMERICA. [PART IT. 



Body black, slender, dull ; scutcheon and breast piceous ; 

 feelers black, nearly half the length of the body ; legs brown ; 

 wings slightly gray, not spotted ; veins black ; poisers tawny, 

 with piceous knobs. Length of the body 2 lines ; of the wings 

 5 lines. 



New York Factory. Presented by Dr. Rae. 



Walker, Diptera Saundersiana. 



Page 434. Div. I. Meig. Dipt. I, p. 131, Tab. V, fig. 5. 



IjimnoMa turpis, Fcem. 



Nigro-fusca; antennae setaceae, moniliformes, thorace breviores; 

 caput et thorax cinereo tomentosa ; abdomen piceum, apice fulvum ; 

 pedes fulvi, femoribus tibiisque apice, tarsisque nigris ; alas sub- 

 cinereae, venulis transversis infuscatis. 



Blackish-brown. Antennae black, setaceous, moniliform, rather 

 shorter than the thorax. Head and thorax with cinereous to- 

 mentum. Abdomen piceous, tawny at the tip. Oviduct cylin- 

 drical, rather long. Legs tawny ; tarsi and tips of the femora 

 and of the tibiae black. Wings grayish ; veins brown, testaceous 

 towards the base ; transverse veinlets clouded ; stigma brown. 

 Halteres testaceous. Length of the body 5 lines ; of the wings 

 10 lines. 



Canada. 



Page 436. Div. n. 

 Mediastinal vein at a little before two-thirds of the length of 

 the wing ; subcostal ending at about three-fourths of the length, 

 connected with the radial by a transverse veinlet at its tip j radial 

 and cubital springing from a common petiole, which is less than 

 half their length, and which forms a right angle near its base ; 

 radial forked near its base ; cubital forming near its base a very 

 obtuse angle, whence proceeds the first externo-medial ; the latter 

 is rectangular near its base and is forked towards its tip, and is 

 connected with the third externo-medial by two transverse vein- 

 lets ; the outer one of these forms a slight angle, whence proceeds 

 the second externo-medial vein ; third externo-medial connected 

 with the subanal by a transverse veinlet, which joins the middle 

 of the hind side of the discal areolet. 



