60. 
61. 
62 
>) 
30. 
THE MOSQUITOES OF THE SOUTHEASTERN STATES 
These spines small, not more than half as long as apical pecten tooth: 
lateral hairs single on segments 3 to 5; anal gills longer than 
analesegment= 22220. 22s Se A Sos ty ace a OC le ae ee eo ee ET 
Air tube about 3:1; anal gills longer than segment, tapered to a blunt 
point; upper head hairs sometimes double__---__________. A. mitchellae 
Air tube about 2:1; anal gills shorter than segment, budlike 
A. sollicitans 
Apical spine of comb scale longer than lateral spinules by about half 
its length; body sparsely spiculate; anal gills longer than the seg- 
ment; pecten ends about at middle of air tube____________ A. infirmatus 
Lateral spinules of comb scale nearly as long as apical spine; body 
glabrous; pecten extending beyond middle of air tube. (Krom _ pub- 
HShedvdeSerip HONS a Sos cs 9) eee ee A. trivittatus 
WYEOMYIA 
Wppersandalowersheadshairse singles ae eence aes ee a eee 
Upper head hairs multiple, lower ones double; ventrolateral tufts of 
anal segment of about 12 subequal hairs; air tube with numerous 
long, single, irregularly placed hairs, a few shorter double tufts 
ATT Cea Ny peek SR RE SS eS a eee oe a W. mitchellii 
Ventrolateral tufts of anal segment with three long hairs; air tube with 
pI SSF eas 13 SB Sade ee ce ee ee ee W. smith 
Ventrolateral tufts of anal segment with one or two long and three 
or four shorter hairs; air tube with a row of six small single or 
double tufts dorsally, a large double or triple tuft below, and two or 
three small single or double ones apically____________-_ W. vanduzeei 
LITERATURE CITED 
(1) BaAtFour, MARSHALL C. 
1928. STUDIES ON THE BIONOMICS OF NORTH AMERICAN ANOPHELINES. 
WINTER ACTIVITIES OF ANOPHELINES IN COASTAL NORTH CAROLINA 
(36° N. LAT.). Amer. Jour. Hyg. 8: 68-76, illus. 
(2) Bane, F. B., QuinBy, G. E., and Simpson, T. W. 
1940. ANOPHELES WALKERI (THEOBALD): A WILD-CAUGHT SPECIMEN HAR- 
BORING MALARIA PLASMODIA. U. S. Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 
55: 119-120, illus. 
(3) Barser, M. A. 
1927. THE FOOD OF ANOPHELINE LARVAE—FOOD ORGANISMS IN PURE 
CULTURE. U. S. Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 42: 1494-1510, illus. 
(4) 
AS le 
(5) and HAYNE, T. B. 
1921. ARSENIC AS A LARVICIDE FOR ANOPHELINE LARVAE. U.S. Pub. Health 
Serv. Rpts. 386: 3027-8084. 
(6) and Haynes, T. B. 
1924. SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE DISPERSAL OF ADULT ANOPHELES. U. S. 
Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 39: 195-203. 
(7) and Komp, W. H. W. 
1929. BREEDING PLACES OF ANOPHELES IN THE YAZOO-MISSISSIPPI DELTA. 
U. S. Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 44: 2457-2462. 
(8) Komp, W. H. W., and Hayne, T. B. 
1924. SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE WINTER ACTIVITIES OF ANOPHELES IN 
SOUTHERN UNITED STATES. U. S. Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 39: 
231-246. 
(9) — Komp, W. H. W., and HAyNgE, T. B. 
1926. MALARIA IN THE PRAIRIE RICE REGIONS OF LOUISIANA AND ARKANSAS. 
U. S. Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 41: 2527-2549. 
(10) ——— Komp, W. H. W., and Hayne, T. B. 
S7 
OL 
1928. THE FOOD OF CULICINE LARVAE. U. S. Pub. Health Serv. Rpts. 
1927. THE SUSCEPTIBILITY TO MALARIA PARASITES AND THE RELATION TO 
THE TRANSMISSION OF MALARIA OF THE SPECIES OF ANOPHELES 
COMMON IN SOUTHERN UNITED STATES. U. S. Pub. Health Serv. 
Rpts. 42; 2487-2502. 
