. Annual report of the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station . Fig. 13. Agallia 4-punctata: a, adult; b, n3aTiph, side view; c, nymph;d, face; c, elytron ; /, female; g, male gentalia. (After Osborn and Ball.) Agallia novella Say. Jassus novellus Say. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Jour. VI, 309, 1831. Agallia novella Van Duzee. Canad. Ent. XXI, 8, 1889. Agallia novella Osborn and Ball, Proc. Dav. Acad. Sci. Vol. VII, p. 54. A slender light colored species with two small black spots on thevertex, a dark line along the suture. Length, mm. Not common in collections this season. Collected by Mr. St


. Annual report of the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station . Fig. 13. Agallia 4-punctata: a, adult; b, n3aTiph, side view; c, nymph;d, face; c, elytron ; /, female; g, male gentalia. (After Osborn and Ball.) Agallia novella Say. Jassus novellus Say. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Jour. VI, 309, 1831. Agallia novella Van Duzee. Canad. Ent. XXI, 8, 1889. Agallia novella Osborn and Ball, Proc. Dav. Acad. Sci. Vol. VII, p. 54. A slender light colored species with two small black spots on thevertex, a dark line along the suture. Length, mm. Not common in collections this season. Collected by Mr. Stover atDexter. I secured a number by sweeping along the roadside near theBangoj- Bog Aug. 5th, and at North Harpswell Aug. 12th and Mr. Alex-ander collected a few from firs June loth. An adult female was col-lected from Cornus July 24, 1914, at Orono. It is evidently of little orno economic importance in Maine. LEAFHOPPERS OF MAINE. 97. ^.CK. Fig. 14. Agallia novella: a, adult; h, nymph, side view; c, nymph,dorsal view; d, face; e, elytron; /, female; g, h, male genitalia. (AfterOsborn and Ball.) Agallia sanguinolenta Prov. Bythoscopus sanguinolenta Provancher. Nat. Canad. IV, 376, 1872. Agallia sanguinolenta Van Duzee, Am. Ent. V, 166, 1889. Agallia sanguinolenta Osborn and BalL Pr. Dav. Acad. Sci. Vol. VII, p. 58. A short robust species usually dark gray or brownish with two largespots on the vertex and two broad spots on the pronotum. Length 3 mm- 3-5 mm- This is by far the most abundant species of the genus in Maine andin fact one of the most abundant and widely distributed species of leaf-hoppers here, as throughout most of the United States. It has beentaken at every locality where collections have been made especially inpastures and meadows. Its food is probably largely clover and alliedplants but it seems able to survive on a wide range of food plants. Inmany parts of the country it is a destructive p


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear