DIPTERA. 635 
The terminal Scatomyzides have the seta simple ; the antennae always short and straight ; they are small and 
glabrous Flies, black, and more or less varied with bulf ; the legs strong, and the eyes large. The upper side of 
the head is flat, with a brown, triangular mask, in which the ocelli are placed. They are found in flowers. Many 
of their larvae mine the interior of vegetables, and some are very injurious to agriculturists, destroying various 
cereal plants previous to their fructification. The larvae of Musca Frit sometimes destroy the barley crops in 
Sweden, to the amount of 100,000 golden ducats in a year, being one-tenth of the produce. The larvae of Oscinis 
puniilionis and lineata. Fab., are equally obnoxious. They constitute our genus 
Oscinis, Latr., to which we add the genus Chlorops, 
Meig., and Piophila, Fallen. 
The fifth division (Dolichocera), which em- 
braces the genus Teianocera, Dum., is closely allied 
to the preceding, but the length of the second 
joint of the antennae, which equals or surpasses 
that of the third, at once distinguishes it. These 
organs are porrected, as long as, or longer than, 
the head, and pointed at the tip. The upper 
surface of the head forms a triangle, obtuse at the tip. 
Some have the antennae shorter than the head. 
Otites, has the seta simple, and the lower part of the face is not produced. 
Euthycera, Latr., has the seta plumose, and the lower part of the face produced into a truncated muzzle. 
The others have the antennae as long as, or longer than, the head. 
Fepedon, Latr., has the antennae evidently longer than the head, and the seta simple. 
Tetanocera, Dum., has the antennae as long as the head, and the seta sometimes plumose. 
The sixth division, Leptopodites, is remarkable for the length and slenderness of the feet, the 
hind ones being at least as long again as the body, which is also slender and filiform ; all the tarsi are 
short. The head is spherical or ellipsoid, and terminated in a point. The antennae are very small. 
They are found on plants, and many frequent aquatic places, 
Micropeza, Meig., has the head ellipsoid, terminated in a point, and the seta of the antennae simple. Calobata 
filiformis, Fabr. 
Calobata, Fabr., has the head spheroidal, and the seta often plumose. 
Nerius, Fabr., has the habit of Micropeza, but diflers in the antennae being as long as the head. 
The seventh division, Carpomyz^, has the wings vibratile, spotted with black or yellow, an appear- 
ance very like that of the Domestic Flies, but with the eyes apart, and the abdomen with four or five 
external segments, mostly terminated in the females by a cylindric or conie ovipositor ; the antennae 
always short, with the seta rarely villose. The larvae of many species live in fruits or seeds, in the 
germ of which the parent fly had deposited its eggs. 
Many species approach the preceding subgenera in the narrow and elongated form of the body, and long legs, 
as well as in the globular or more elongated form of the head. 
Diopsis, Linn., distinct from the very elongated horns into which the sides of the head are produced, and the 
scutellum with two spines. These singular exotic insects have been monographed by Dalman, [and subsequently 
by me, in the Transactions of the Linncean Society}. 
Cephalia, Meig., has the palette of the antennae narrow and long, and the palpi spatulate. 
Sepsis, Fall., has the palette much shorter, with a naked seta, and the palpi nearly filiform. [Small, active Flies, 
with wings spotted with black.] 
The other Carpomyzae have the appearance of Common Flies, with the head short and hemispherical, and the 
legs of moderate length. 
The three following subgenera have the upper surface of the head almost horizontal, so that the antennae appear 
inserted on a level with the top. 
Ortalis, Fall., has the abdomen not terminated by an external ovipositor in the females. M. Fallen refers the 
Musca cerasi, Linn., to this subgenus, the larva of which generally feeds inside the fruit of the cherry, quitting 
the fruit and entering the earth when ready to undergo its transformations. 
Tetanops, Meig., has an exserted ovipositor in the females, like a tail ; the head, seen from above, appears nearly 
triangular. 
Tephrites, Latr. {Trypeta, Meig.), has the abdomen similarly terminated, but the head is rather transverse than 
longitudinal, and rounded. Musca Cardui, Linn., the larva of which lives in galls, on the common thistle, on 
the substance of which it feeds. 
Dacus, Fab., comprises those Tephrites which have the palette more elongate, including the species which 
attacks the olive. The inhabitants of the Isle of France are scarcely able to obtain any sound lemons, in conse- 
quence of the attacks of a species of this genus. 
