31 
Aspidiotiphagus citrinus (Oraw). (fig. 10). 
Coceophagus citrinus Craw. Destructive Insects, Sacramento, CaL, 1891. 
Aspidiotiphagus citrinus Howard. Insect Life, yol. vi, p. 234, 1891. 
Female. — Length, 0.58 mm. ; expanse, 1.16mm. ; greatest width of fore- 
wing, 0.09 mm. Antennae light yellow-brown ; eyes black, ocelli bright 
red j head yellow; occiput dark brown; pronotum dark brown ; mesono- 
tum yellow j metanotum yellow-brown ; abdomen brown ; legs uniformly 
dusky yellow; wings with marginal vein dark fuscous, and a broad 
fuscous band extending directly across wing from marginal vein as a 
base. Spiracular hairs on pre- anal abdominal joint very long. Thorax 
somewhat wider than head or abdomen, these being subequal in width. 
Eedescribed from fourteen female specimens reared January 18 and 
24, February 2, and March 13, 1889, by Mr. D. W. Coquillett from 
FlG. 10. — Aspidiotiphagus citrinus (Craw.)— greatly enlarged (from Insect Life). 
Aspidiotus aurantii Maskell, var. citrinus, from San Gabriel, Oal. Mr. 
G. W. Johnson has also sent me six specimens reared at the Illinois 
State Laboratory of Natural History from Aspidiotus ficus occurring 
on Citrus decumana in the university greenhouse. Professor Berlese 
has reared this species in Italy from an Aspidiotus on Acacia longifolia 
and from Diaspis rosa\ 
Genus CGCCOPHAGUS Westwood. 
Coceophagus Westwood. Philosoph. Mag., vol. Ill, 1833. 
Aplielinus Walker (in part). Monographia Chalciditum, London, 1839. 
Coccobius Ratzeburg (in part). Ichneumonen der Forst-Insekten, vol. in, p. 195, 
1852. 
Ratzebnrg's genus Coccobius includes, as will be seen from the 
synonymical list, certain species of Coceophagus and certain species of 
Aphelinus as well. His antennal figure is that of Aphelinus, but his 
descriptions include species Avhich apparently belong to Coceophagus, 
notably C. notatus. 
In this genus the antennre are 8-jointed, the scape rather short and 
stout; pedicel one-third the length of the scape and about the same 
