No. 34-] HEMIPTERA OF CONNECTICUT: FULGORIDAE. 55 



L. campestris Van Duzee. 



Bull. Buff. Soc. Nat. Sci., v, 254, 1897. 



A small pale yellowish species in which the female is almost 

 immaculate while the male has a conspicuous black spot on the 

 pleural pieces and basal angles of the scutellum, and the abdomen 

 is fulvous-red marked with black. It is common on grass lands 

 and is widely distributed in the United States and Canada. This 

 species has been sunk as a synonym of arvensis by some, and the 

 Fitch collection at Albany does have a typical male campestris 

 placed among the arvensis material. Dr. Fitch, however, gives 

 the length of his species as .17 of an inch while this is but .12 of 

 an inch, and he states that his is immaculate while including both 

 sexes in his description. So for the present, at least, nothing can 

 be gained by sinking campestris as a synonym of arvensis. There 

 is a large pale species, not uncommon in New York State, which 

 answers entirely to Fitch's description but I have not been able 

 satisfactorily to locate its male and it may prove to be a dimorphic 

 form of pellucida. 



New Haven, 13, 30 May, 191 1 (B. H. W.). 

 L. lineatipes Van Duzee. 



Bull. Buff. Soc. Nat. Sci., v, 255, 1897. 



A small nearly unicolorous species of which the males are black 

 and the females pale yellowish. The front is rather broad, oval, 

 and truncated at apex as well as at base, and the legs are testaceous, 

 lineate with brown. It is distributed from New York to California 

 and undoubtedly occurs in Connecticut. 

 L. lutulenta Van Duzee. 



Bull. Buff. Soc. Nat. Sci., v, 252, 1897. 



This is a dull brown species, varied with paler brown, with a 

 rather broad oval front, marked, as in lineatipes, by black lines next 

 the carinae in pale examples. It ranges from Massachusetts to 

 Colorado. 



New Haven, 3 Oct., 1902, 13 May, 1 June, 191 1 (B. H. W.). 

 L. vanduzeei (Crawford). 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xlvi, 622, 1914. 



Very near lutulenta, apparently a little larger with different male 

 genitalia. Described from Massachusetts and should be found in 

 Connecticut. 



