HEMIPTERA OF COLORADO. 
71 
Female: Face two-thirds wider than long, minutely, indistinctly sculptured; clypeus 
hroad at base, gradually tapering to the pointed apex, one-fifth longer than broad, basal 
suture obsolete; lorae long, nearly as 
long and half as broad as clypeus; genae 
narrow, outer margin concave beneath 
eyes, convex below the lorae where they 
are verjt narrow, touching the clypeus at 
the broadest part; front but little longer 
than broad, superiorly very broadly and 
evenly rounded. Vertex very slightly 
transversely depressed, anterior margin 
carinately elevated, not longer at middle 
than at eyes. Pronotum transversely 
wrinkled, minutely scabrous, two dis¬ 
tinct pits behind anterior margin near 
the median line, thee-fourths wider than 
long, anterior curvature three-eights of 
length. Scutellum finely and trans¬ 
versely wrinkled and minutely scabrous, 
longer than head and pronotum, twice 
longer than wide. Elytra with a fine, 
thickly set, golden pubescence, entirely 
finely, densely punctured. Color pale 
rufous throughout, tinged with olive 
green on pronotum and clavus, beneath 
more yellowish. 
Length 6.5 mm. Described from two 
females. Large, but somewhat narrower 
across the hemelytra than is u ual in 
this genus. 
Maiiitou, July 24fh on oak (Gillette). Cheyenne Canon, 
Colorado Springs, July (Tucker). 
I^epyronia angnlifera Uhl. Det. VanDuzee. 
Howe’s Gulch, June 14th and September 1st (Gillette). 
l^epyronia quadrangiilaris Say. Det. VanDuzee. 
Canon City, and the irrigated region west of Denver, August 6th to 17th 
(Uhler, 5). Colorado (VanDuzee, 6). 
Fort Collins, September 27th on Solidago, Clematis ligusti- 
cifnlia, and Carex (Gillette). Fort Collins, August 26th to 
September 14th, on Solidago (Baker). 
Aphrophora periniitata Uhl. 
Colorado (Uhler, 6). Colorado (Snow—see VanDuzee, 5). 
Manitou Park (Snow). 
Pachyopsis laetus Uhl. 
At Manitou and near Canon City, upon small bushes near water August 
lull to 16th (Uhler, 5). Custer County, midalpine (Cockerell, 10). Colorado 
(Snow—see VanDuzee, 5). Colorado (VanDuaee, 4). 
