282 
Psyche 
[September 
Salt, George 1927 Notes on the Strepsiptera and their 
hymenopterous hosts. Psyche 34 (5) : 182-192. 
Saunders, S. S. 1853 Notices of some new species of strep- 
sipterous insects from Albania, with further observa- 
tions on the habits, transformations, and sexual econo- 
my of these parasites. Trans. Ent. Soc. London (2) 2 
(4/5) : 125-144, 2 pi. 
Saunders, S. S. 1872 Stylopidarum, ordinem Strepsiptero- 
rum Kirbii constituentium, mihi tamen potius Coleop- 
terorum Familiss, Rhipiphoridis Meloidisque propinquse, 
Monographia. Trans. Ent. Soc. London 1872: 1-48, 287- 
288, 1 pi. 
Schrader, Sally Hughes 1924 Reproduction in Acroschismus 
wheeleri Pierce. Jour. Morph. Physiology 39 (1) : 
157-197, 4 pi. 
Smith, Frederick 1859 A contribution to the history of 
Stylops, with an enumeration of such species of exotic 
Hymenoptera as have been found to be attacked by 
those parasites. Trans. Ent. Soc. London (2) 5 (3) : 
127-133. 
Wheeler, W. M. 1910 The effects of parasitic and other kinds 
of castration in insects. Jour. Exp. Zoology 8: 377-438, 
8 fig. 
Zavattari, E. 1909 Di alcune larve di Strepsiptera. II Ruwen- 
zori, Relazioni Scientifiche 1 : 271-273. 
Anatrichis minuta Dej. A single specimen was taken 
in Framingham, Mass., on May 10, 1908, and no more have 
been seen until September 15, 1929, when I found 5 speci- 
mens by treading about in the soft soil in a dried-up pond 
in Acton, Mass. On September 22, I again visited the place 
and took four more. They were hiding among the small 
grass-like plants and prostrate vegetation. There is but one 
record in the New York list of insects. 
C. A. Frost , Framingham, Mass. 
