No. 34-] HEMIPTERA OF CONNECTICUT! COCCIDAE. 35 1 



New Haven, 24 Jan., 1911; 11 Nov., 1915 (B. H. W.) ; 26 Aug., 1913 

 (Q. S. L.). 

 K. nivalis King and Cockerell. 



Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist, ii, 330, 1898, 



Reported from Massachusetts. 

 K. perryi King. 



Psyche, ix, 81, 1900. 



Reported from Massachusetts. 

 K. pettiti Ehrhorn. 



Can. Ent, xxxi, 7, 1899. 



Occurs in Canada, Massachusetts, and New York. 

 K. pubescens Bogue. 



Can. Ent., xxx, 172, 1898. 



New Haven, 20 Aug., ICJ05 (H. L. V.) ; 27 June, 1913 (W. E. B.) ; 24 

 June, 21 July, 1915 (B. H. W.). 

 K. sassceri King. (PI. xiii, 4.) 



Pom. Jour. Ent. Zool., vi, 48, 1914. 



New Haven, 26 July, 1906; 12 Oct., 1908; 11 Nov., 1913; Putnam, 17 

 Apr., 1906 (B. H. W.) ; Meriden, 27 Aug., 1913 (H. L. J.) ; Farmington, 

 26 June, 1915 (Nathaniel Slocombe). 



K. trinotatus Bogue. 



Can. Ent., xxxii, 205, 1900. 



Recorded from New York, New Jersey, and Ohio. 

 *K. waldeni King. 



Jour. Econ. Ent, 7, 150, 1914. 



Portland, 12 Aug., 1913 (B. H. W.). 



Eriococcus Targioni-Tozzetti. 



Both sexes enclosed in a white, dense, felt-like sac, ovoid in 

 shape. Female antennae with seven or eight segments ; male 

 antennae of ten segments ; anal ring with eight hairs. 



Key to Species. 



Tibiae nearly twice the length of the tarsi quercus 



Tibiae shorter than tarsi azaleae 



E. azaleae Comstock. Azalea bark scale. 



Rept U. S. Dept Agr., 338, 1880. 



Female: Length of sac 3mm., thickness 1.5mm.; sac nearly 

 oval, white, covered with projecting white wax filaments. Female 

 dark purple, almost black, nearly naked, a small amount of wax 

 secretion occurring on posterior portion of ventral surface ; dorsal 

 surface covered with large acuminate yellow spines ; antennae with 

 six segments, first, second, third and sixth subequal, and nearly 

 twice the length of the fourth and fifth. Tibiae about two-thirds 



