392 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



4a Legs bearing many erect scales. Large species Psorophora 



Legs without these scales (5) 



5 Thorax with metallic hlue scales; small species; male with 



but a single curved claw on the middle leg; palpi of both 



sexes two jointed and short Urano taenia (sapphirina) 



Thorax not so marked (6) 



6 " Hind feet black, thedr apexes snow white." Male palpi 



long, in the female short Conchyliastes 



Not as above (7) 



7 Palpi elongate (8) 



Palpi short (9) 



8 The fourth fore tarsal joint shorter than the fifth, about as 



long as wide. Palpi elongate and pointed Culex (males) 



Fourth fore tarsal, joint longer than wide. Male palpi 



with enlarged apical joints Anopheles 



S Small species with two jointed palpi; the second joint conicsil. .A ed e s 

 Medium sized species, with four jointed palpi, its apical joint 



cylindrical Oulex (females) 



Of the southern genera, Megarhinus and Toxorhynchites may 

 be known by their strongly curved proboscis and green and 

 bluish colors. Stegomyia resembles Culex, but has the thorax 

 marked with lines of silvery scales. 



Subfamily corethrinae 

 Genus corethra Meigen 

 This genus together with Corethrella, Mochlonyx and Pelo- 

 rempis, nov. gen. forms the subfamily Corethrinae, which is dis- 

 tinguished from the remainder of the family by the comparative 

 shortness of the proboscis. There are but 15 or 16 species in the 

 genug, four or five of which occur in North America. The life 

 history of some of the species has long been known. Some of 

 the works on the biology of Corethra are: 



1844 Staeger. Katurhist. Tidsskr. I. K. 2. B. 549, 600. Corethra 

 f u s c a . 



1860 Weissmann, Dr A. Die Metamorphose der C. plumicornis. 



1884 Herrick, A. Minn. Geol. Nat. Hist. Sur. p.lO. C. appendi- 

 c u 1 a t a . 



1888 Meinert, F. De Eucephale Myggelarver, p.30 to 53. With bibliog- 

 raphy. 



Generic characters 



Usually delicate, moderate sized species of the appearance 



of a Chironomid, but distinguished by its many veined wing. 



Head tramsversely oval, epistome somewhat projecting; pro- 



