REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST 1907 T45 
Jarvis’s identification with Garman’s form is probably erroneous; 
the galls are very different, see our no. 131. The same error ap- 
pears to have been made by Cook for no. 136. Probably no. 129 
was intended. 
Salix bebbiana (rostrata) (Bebb’s willow) 
IAS SOG ie, Warf. 
Salix cordata (heart-leaved willow) 
129 A purple or pale green capsule-gall, projecting either above 
or below the leaf, or both. | 
German 83 Pp. 137 (Pliny tOpius Sp.) I. 
This seems to agree well with the foregoing, and may be the 
cause of the confusion indicated. 
Salix discolor (pussy willow) 
*130 The same as no. 127. 
Jarvis ’07, p.60 Ont. 
Our specimens, believed to be this form, are strongly pilose above 
and thickly pubescent beneath, the aperture with swollen pro- 
truding margin, agreeing closely with the galls of Eriophyes 
LCtamOtlMricse laevis CNalene), oi Sallis caprca oi 
Europe, figured by Connold ’or [ Brit. Veg. Galls, p. 164, pl. 66]. 
From Gravel pond near Grafton, Rensselaer co., and from Catskill, 
IN, 
Salix fluviatilis (longifolia) (long-leaved willow) 
*131 A leaf deformation consisting of one or two narrow longi- 
tudinal upward folds extending lengthwise of the leaf, opening by 
a slit below. Color, yellowish green to brown. ‘The mite is Erio- 
phyes salicicola (Garman). 
Gammam S2, p.ras, PinvyroDtns salicicolla 1a 
Payerott O7. IN, W. Agate, IE gd, Sie, Bw Ase, MO, Z 
Specimens from Irving, Chautauqua co. BNENe 
Salix fragilis (?) (brittle willow) 
132 Deformation of leaf and twig, usually clustered near the 
terminus, whitish green at first, turning grayish black by winter. 
Jarvis ’08, p.93, first sp., pl. D, fig. 5 Ont. 
This is unquestionably “Salicis aenigma ” (our no. 133) 
on a new host if Jarvis’s identification of the latter in the ex- 
plantation of plates is correct. But why not 5. nigra? 
