Report of the State Entomologist on injurious and other insects of the state of New York . r 1907 [p. i93-4, and pi. 10, fig. 5], and is readilydistinguished therefrom by the abbreviated middle caudal seta andby the form of the appendages in the male. Potamanthus inequalis sp. nov. Length of body 11 mm, of fore leg about 10 mm, of lateral setae26 mm, of middle seta 15 mm, expanse of wings 24 mm. Colorwhite, with fuscous head, pale yellowish thorax and translucentwhite abdomen. Legs white except the slightly infuscated tips of REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST I908 75 fore tarsi and tibiae, and


Report of the State Entomologist on injurious and other insects of the state of New York . r 1907 [p. i93-4, and pi. 10, fig. 5], and is readilydistinguished therefrom by the abbreviated middle caudal seta andby the form of the appendages in the male. Potamanthus inequalis sp. nov. Length of body 11 mm, of fore leg about 10 mm, of lateral setae26 mm, of middle seta 15 mm, expanse of wings 24 mm. Colorwhite, with fuscous head, pale yellowish thorax and translucentwhite abdomen. Legs white except the slightly infuscated tips of REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST I908 75 fore tarsi and tibiae, and the joinings of the segments of the sametarsi. Wings whitish liyahne, with pinkish iridescence. End seg-ments of the abdomen of a dull satiny whiteness on the dorsal white, with the joinings very faintly darker in color, themiddle seta but little more than half as long as the laterals. The male forceps is not remarkably different from that ofP. diaphanus [loc. cit. fig. 5], but the inner appendages arevery diiTerently formed as shown in the drawing Fig. 22 Potamanthus inequalis n. sp.:f, forceps limb; e, inner appendages Tlie pinned submarginal skin of the same specimen is white: itsfore femora are lo mm long, and its setae (broken) are clothedwith copious soft white pubescence. 76 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Appendix: B CATALOGUE OF THE DESCRIBED SCOLYTIDAE OFAMERICA, NORTH OF MEXICO BY J. M. SWAINE The following catalogue is intended to include all names that havebeen proposed for species of Scolytidae occurring in America, northof Mexico, with citations of published articles referring references were collected originally for our use, while work-ing on the family Scolytidae. They include practically all the liter-ature published on the North American species of the family. Changes should, we believe, be made in the location of a few ofthe species here listed, and several of the genera may, with advan-tage, be divided. These changes require


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectinsects, bookyear1882