22 EEPOET OF SEARCH FOE ENEMIES OF CITBT7S WHITE FLY. 
club slightly longer than middle segment, basal segment again slightly shorter. Fore- 
wings broad, with moderately long bordering cilia; disc uniformly covered with 
minute cilia; stigmal vein rounded below, its anterior margin for a time parallel with 
costa; marginal vein faintly indicated, its base joining stigmal in an acute angle. (In 
this respect this species differs from all other known species of its genus.) General 
color light yellow; all legs pallid; eyes dark; ocelli coral-red; antennal club dusky; 
wings hyaline, wing veins dusky. 
Male. — Of practically the same size and structure as the female, but differing in 
color. The coloration closely resembles that of Aspidiotiphagus titrinus, to which it 
bears a superficial resemblance; pronotum brownish; mesonotum orange yellow; 
metanotum and epimerum brownish; abdomen dark brown except at base and tip 
where it is lighter; hind femora dusky at tips; wing veins distinctly fuscous, consid- 
erably darker than in female. 
Conclusions Drawn feom Situation at Sahaeanpue and Lahoee. 
Our searches at Saharanpur and Lahore had resulted not only in 
the discovery of the citrus white fry, but, what was especially impor- 
tant, the discovery that it was being attacked by both a predatory 
enemy and a true internal parasite. It was at once evident that our 
next duty lay in attempting to collect and transport to Florida living 
material of these beneficial insects. Unfortunately the season at this 
time was so well advanced that practically all insect life was in a dor- 
mant condition, so that the collecting of living material during the 
next few months was impossible. Kather than remain inactive yA 
upper India until the following spring, it seemed best to continue the 
search throughout India and into China with the hope of acquiring a 
broad grasp of the white-fly situation throughout the Orient. Hav- 
ing the situation thus in hand, we would know whether or not there 
were other regions equally prolific in natural enemies of the white fly. 
Such information would be of great value to all future work in .this 
particular field. 
Aleyeodes citei in India. 
With the exception of the lower part of the peninsula practically 
all of India suitable to the growing of citrus fruit trees has been 
searched. The writer has examined orange trees at Peshawur, the 
frontier city in the northwest near the entrance to the Khyber Pass; 
along the lower elevations of the Himalayas (PI. VI, fig. 2) at Dehra- 
dun; in the United Provinces; in Sikkim below Thibet; and eastward 
into the Khasia Hills of Assam (PL VI, fig. 1) . In the west the writer 
has been among orange trees at Poona, in the Bombay Presidency, and 
eastward at Nagpur, in the Central Province. Much of the interven- 
ing territory between these outposts of travel has been covered. 
As a result of these travels it can be stated that in all places visited 
in India, in which oranges were grown, infestations of the white fly 
were to be found. This is equivalent to stating that this aleyrodid 
