ALEURODICUS NEGLECTUS. 63 
pores, and the body segments are fairly well indicated (PL XIX, 
fig. 7). From the compound wax pores are produced rather short, 
brittle, glassy wax rods, usually much broken and lying over surface 
of leaf. Color on leaf dirty white to yellowish, the empty case clear 
white. There is no well-marked marginal rim. The margin bears 
all around conspicuous short wax tubes, broadly rounded distally 
(PI. XIX, fig. 11). Abdominal segments moderately distinct, tho- 
racic segments less so. On each side are six compound wax pores, a 
pair on cephalic region, and five pairs on abdominal region. From 
the center of each of the two caudal pairs of wax pores and from the 
cephalic pair arises a strong, brownish-colored process or spine, 
which is quite conspicuous and morphologically appears to corre- 
spond with the central rod-like process in the compound pores in 
other species of the genus. 
This spine-like structure is also present in the remaining wax 
pores, though much reduced (PL XIX, figs. 8 and 9). There is a 
pair of minute spines on the caudo-lateral margin. 
Vasiform orifice (PL XIX, fig. 10) subcircular in outline, the 
cephalic margin a straight line, a little wider than long. Operculum 
short, about twice as broad as long, cephalic margin straight, caudal 
margin broadly concave, and the ends rounded. 
Lingula large, spatulate, somewhat narrowed at base, and bearing 
distally two pairs of spines. Operculum and lingula minutely setose. 
On ventral surface of case legs and antenna? inconspicuous; legs 
short, conical, without claws. Antenna? short, subcorneal, ending 
in a spinulous process and apparently but one-segmented. These 
structures differ notably from those in typical forms of the genus, 
wherein the antenna? are two-jointed, the distal joint long and ringed, 
and each leg terminating in a single claw. 
Adult. — Unknown. 
Aleurodicus neglectus n. sp. 
(PI. XX, figs. 1-11; PI. XXI, fig. 2.) 
Guava leaves infested with this insect were collected by Mr. Albert 
Koebele, at Para, Brazil, in 1882, and forwarded to the Bureau of 
Entomology. Specimens of the same insect were also received from 
Robert Xewstead on Ficus bengalensis and Anona squamosa, collected 
in Demerara in 1892. With the appearance of the description of 
Aleurodicus anorwe by Douglas in 1892, 20 the above two lots of ma- 
terial were erroneously referred to anonce and so labeled and carried 
in the Bureau of Entomology collection, as was also a distinct and 
much larger species, with clear wings, A. giganteus, collected by Mr. 
Koebele December 28, 1882, at Pernambuco, Brazil. 
