ANNUAL REPORT OF NEW-YORK 
746 
PINK. LEAVES. 
275- Abbot’s saw-fly, Lophyrus Abbotii, Leach. 
The female 0.30 long, rust colored, the head, under side and 
legs clay colored, the antennae black and seventeen-jointed, and 
the wings hyaline with a slight tinge of yellowish. 
270- Fabricius’s saw-fly, Lophyrus Fabricii, Leach. 
The female 0.30 long, clay colored, the thorax spotted with 
black, the antennae black and sixteen-jointed, and the wings 
hyaline with a slight tinge of yellowish. 
277- Partner saw-fly, Lophyrus compar, Leach. 
The female 0.33 long, black with pale shanks and feet, 
hyaline wings and sixteen-jointed antennae. 
278. Philadelphia Chrysomela, Chrysomela Philadelphica, Linnaeus. 
(Coleoptera. Chrysomclidai.) [Plate iii, fig. 3.] 
Feeding upon the leaves from May till September, a very 
convex broad-oval beetle about 0.30 long, of a dark bottle-green 
color with white wing covers sometimes tinged with yellow and 
having on them numerous spots and dots of dark green with a 
black line on the suture widened anteriorly and a second line 
parallel with this on each side, the antennas and legs rusty red. 
This is also common upon willows, with other species closely 
similar to it. 
279. Pine Chrysomela, Glyptoscelis hirtus, Olivier. (Coleoptera. Cliryso- 
melidao.) 
Feeding on the leaves in May and Juno, a thick cylindrical 
beetle resembling the Cloaked Chrysomela, No. 27, but with 
the pubescence much thinner than in that and the other Ame¬ 
rican species of this genus. Its color is brassy, more brilliant 
on the under side and tinged with coppery. The male is 
usually 0.28 and the female 0.35 long. 
In American collections of insects this is usually ticketed 
with the name Eumolpus Pint, under which Say described it. 
But it had long before been named differently by Olivier. 
