FAMILIES XYLOPHAGIDjE AND SYRPHIDiE. 183 



Tabanvs 



Sooty black. In some lights, the abdomen above is glaucous ; beneath, it has a shade of 

 greenish blue : eyes faintly bronzed. Face obsolete, in consequence of the great ex- 

 tension of the eyes, which meet on the top, divaricating only just above the base of 

 the antennae, leaving a small triangular area through which the median line passes, 

 and winch is also traversed transversely by two grooves : this area is occupied by six 

 or eight little glossy eminences. Legs and breast covered with a jet black pubescence. 

 The form of the eye is remarkable ; the top of the head being capped, as it were, with 

 the organ, which projects directly in front. The insect differs entirely from the two pre- 

 ceding species, and has not probably received a specific name. 



Xylophagidae. 



Midas filatus. ( Plate xxviii, fig. 11.) 



Musca clavatus ( Drury). 



Black : second abdominal segment yellow upon the superior parts ; wings copper-brown 



and submetallic, scarcely transparent. Length 1 \ inch ; expansion of wings, 2\. 



This species, so far as my observations extend, is a rare insect in- New-York. It is easily 



distinguished by the yellow segment of the abdomen referred to, which extends only to 



the sides, the inferior part preserving the black color of the remainder of the organs. Its 



larva is a white maggot, and exists in decaying stumps and logs. It is usually found in the 



forests in its perfect state in midsummer, and is one of the largest dipterous insects of 



New-York. 



Syrphidae. 



Milesia vikginiensis. ( Plate xxviii, fig. 3.) 



Musca vikgimensis ( Drury). Milesia ornata ( Fabricius). 

 Eyes black ; front of the head cream-color ; antennas like short hairs ; thorax yellow, 

 with two black rings ; abdomen black, ornamented with yellow rings, every alternate 

 one of which is interrupted in the middle : it is marked with a yellow dot at the 

 base, and terminated with yellow. Legs yellow ; wings dusky. Underside, breast black, 

 with yellow spots : ocelli distinct. 

 It is rather mote than three-fourths of an inch long ; expansion of wings, 1^. 



