. Report of the State Entomologist on injurious and other insects of the state of New York. mora dis-tally and the tarsal oegments somewhatdarker; claws long, slender, stronglycurved, the pulvilli a little longer thanthe claws. Genitalia; dorsal plate short,stout, deeply and triangularly incised, the lobes broadly rounded. Female. Length 3 mm. Antennae extending to the third abdominalsegment, sparsely haired, light brown; 14 segments, the fifth with astem about one-fifth the length of the subcylindric basal enlargement,which latter has a length about twice its diameter; terminal seg-ment reduc
. Report of the State Entomologist on injurious and other insects of the state of New York. mora dis-tally and the tarsal oegments somewhatdarker; claws long, slender, stronglycurved, the pulvilli a little longer thanthe claws. Genitalia; dorsal plate short,stout, deeply and triangularly incised, the lobes broadly rounded. Female. Length 3 mm. Antennae extending to the third abdominalsegment, sparsely haired, light brown; 14 segments, the fifth with astem about one-fifth the length of the subcylindric basal enlargement,which latter has a length about twice its diameter; terminal seg-ment reduced, the enlargement with a length about twice its diameter,apically a short, stout appendage. Palpi; the first segment short,stout, slightly expanded at the distal fourth, the second stout,rectangular, with a length about twice its diameter, the third a littlelonger, more slender, the fourth one-half longer and more slenderthan the third. Color, wing and leg characters about as in the oppo-site sex. Ovipositor about as long as the abdomen, the terminallobes indistinct. Type Cecid. Fig- 39 Contariniacanadensis, fifth anten-nal segment of male (en-larged, original) I20 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Contarinia coloradensis Felt 1912 Felt, E. P. N. Y. Ent. Soc. Jour. 20:240-41 This Species produces a large, budlike deformity on P i n u sscopulorum, although Dicrodiplosis gillettei Felt,probably Zoophagous, was reared from this gall. The work ofthis insect appears to be common in Colorado since it has beenrepeatedly received from several correspondents. THECODIPLOSIS Kieff. 1895 Kieffer, J. J. Soc. Ent. Fr., Bui. 64, p. 194 1896 Wien. Ent. Zeit., 15:94, 100 i8gy Syn. Cecid. de Eur. & Alg., p. 35 1910 Riibsaamen, E. H. Zeitsch. Wissenschaft. Insektenbiol., 15:285 1911 Felt, E. P. N. Y. Ent. Soc. Jour., 19:51 1913 Kieffer, J. J. Gen. Insect., fasc. 152, p. 184 This genus may be distinguished from Contarinia by costa notbeing interrupted at its union with the third vein, and by the long
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectinsects, bookyear1882