Sept, si, 1914 
New Sarcophagid Parasite of Grasshoppers 
445 
The nearest relatives of Sarcophaga kellyi are 5. cimbicis and an 
undescribed species. S. cimbicis differs in having three postsutural 
dorsocentrals, as above mentioned, and also in having a smaller, wholly 
red hypopygium; the undescribed species differs in having the rows of 
frontal bristles not diverging toward the eyes at the lower end (subgenus 
Ravinia), no small pair of apical scutellar bristles in male, and in having 
the abdomen in the male strongly arched downward toward the tip. 
LITERATURE CITED 
1875. RieEy, C. V. Seventh Annual Report on the Noxious, Beneficial, and other 
Insects of the State of Missouri ... 196 p., 39 fig., 1 map. Jefferson City. 
Sarcophaga carnaria reared from Melanoplus spretus, p. 180. 
Sarcophaga sp. reared from body of a mantid, p. 180, footnote. 
1879. Comstock, J. H. Report upon Cotton Insects ... 511 p.,3 pi. (2 col.). Wash¬ 
ington, D. C. 
Sarcophaga sarraceniae reared from Alabama (Aletia ) sp. p., 205-208. 
1882. CaevERT, Frank. Sarcophaga lineata destructive to locusts in the Dardanelles. 
In Amor. Nat., v. 16, no. 5, p. 410-411. 
1885. RitKy, C. V. Fourth Report of the United States Entomological Commission, 
being a Revised Edition of Bulletin no. 3, and the Final Report on the Cot¬ 
ton Worm, together with a chapter on the Boll Worm. 399 p. and app. 
147 p., 64 pi., 2 maps. Washington, D. C. 
Sarcophaga sp. reared from ( Aletia ) Alabama argillacea , p. 107. 
1892. Coquiixett, D. W. Report on the locust invasion of California in 1891. In 
U. S. Dept. Agr., Div. Ent., Bui. 27, p. 34-57. 
Sarcophaga sp. attacking locusts in California, p. 49. 
1893-1905. RttNCKEE d’Herculais, J. P. A. Invasions des Acridiens Vulgo Sauter- 
elles en Algerie. t. 1, pt. 2. Alger-Mustapha. 
Method of oviposition of Sarcophaga clathrata Meigen described, p. 690. 
1896. Lugger, Otto. First Annual Report of the Entomologist of the State Experi¬ 
ment Station of the University of Minnesota ... for the year 1895. 155 p., 
75 fig., 16 pi. Minneapolis. 
Sarcophaga sp. attacking locusts, p. 57. 
1899. Hunter, S. J. Alfalfa, grasshoppers, Dees: their relationship ... Univ. Kans., 
Lawrence, Contrib. Ent. Lab. 65, 152 p., 29 fig. 
Opinion that Sarcophaga sp. deposit eggs on soft body of locust immediately after molting, p. 33. 
1901. Morgan, H. A. The differential grasshopper in the Mississippi Delta—other 
common species. In U. S. Dept. Agr., Div. Ent., Bui. n. s. no. 30, p. 7-33. 
List of Sarcophagidae reared from grasshoppers, p. 24-26. 
1907. Lahiixe, F. La langosta y sus moscas parasitarias. In An. Min. Agr. Argen¬ 
tina, Secc. Zootec., Bact., Vet., y Zool. t. 3, no. 4, 136 p., 29 fig., 7 pi. (5 col.). 
Mentions rearing many sarcophagids from grasshoppers, but records no observations on their 
methods of deposition. 
1912. Smith, H. S. Technical results from the gipsy moth parasite laboratory. IV. 
The chalcidoid genus Perilampus and its relations to the problem of parasite 
introduction. U. S. Dept. Agr., Bur. Ent., Tech. Ser. no. 19, pt. 4, p. 33-69, 
31 
