988 N. C. AGR. EXP. STA. BUL. 239 
G. anduzei, n. sp., is named in honor of Dr. Pablo Anduze who collected one 
series of specimens of the species. G. anduzet is very similar to G. vicina, n. sp., 
but differs in that the shaft of the aedeagus is of nearly uniform width 
throughout, and in that the aedeagal apex is seldom broadened, and then not 
as much so as in wicina. 
Graphogonalia vicina, NEW SPECIES 
FiGuRE 803, PAGE 989 
Length of male 5.4-6.2 mm, of female 5.6-5.9 mm. Head with median 
length of crown varying from slightly less than two-thirds to slightly less than 
eight-tenths interocular width and from four-tenths to one-half transocular 
width. Male with aedeagus elongate, slender, shaft narrowed anteapically and 
broadened apically, shaft arched slightly posteriorly in lateral view, apex with 
a very short curved process on each side in caudoventral view, and with apical 
margin slightly concave between the processes; paraphyses as in G. anduzet, n. 
sp. (above). 
Color as in anduzei, but with black markings of crown not occurring as 
spots. 
Holotype male and two females, ‘“‘Puerto Madiera”’, Chiapas, Mexico, Oc- 
tober, 1954 (N. L. H. Krauss), on leaves of Lantana camara L.; one male, 
Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico, May 7, 1944 (E. Hernandez); two males, 1 mile 
N. of Finca la Maquina, Dept. ‘“‘Suchitepequez’’, June 11, 1966 (O. S. Flint); 
one male, Santa Anna, El Salvador, October, 1959 (N. L. H. Krauss) 
(USNM). One male, Chapingo, D. F., Mexico (DeLong collection, OSU). 
G. vicina, n. sp., is very similar to G. anduzei in the discussion of which dis- 
tinguishing characters are treated. 
Graphogonalia celeta, NEW SPECIES 
FiGuRE 804, PAGE 989 
Length of male 5.9-6.1 mm. Head with median length of crown varying 
from two-thirds to three-fourths interocular width and slightly more than one- 
half transocular width. Male with aedeagus very short in comparison to G. an- 
duzet, n. sp., and G. vicina, n. sp., in caudoventral view with shaft gradually 
broadened in its apical one-half, apical margin convex; paraphyses consisting 
of a very short base and a pair of short, slender, tapering, acute, widely- 
separated rami. 
Color as in anduzei except that the dark markings of the crown occur as fine 
lines, not as spots. 
Holotype and one additional male, Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Mexico, ““M. F. 
1055”, July 29, 1936 (DeLong collection, OSU). 
G. celeta, n. sp., is closer to G. evagorata, n. sp. (below) that to the other 
species of the genus, but the form of the aedeagus is distinctive for celeta. 
