. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. 322 U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 216 (Washington). 9, Texas (Cambridge). 9 (type), Texas (Phila- delphia). This species is in the Austroriparian fauna, but has been collected also in Ohio. Adults occur in spring and early Figures 142, 143.—Localities: 142 (left), Coccygomimus maurus; 143 (right), C. ellopiae. 4. Coccygomimus ellopiae (Harrington) Figure 326,1 Pimpla ellopiae Harrington, 1892, Canadian Ent., vol. 24, p. 99; <?, ? . Types: d\ 9 , Victoria, B. C. (Ottawa). Front wing to 12 mm. long; body moderately slender; fa


. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. 322 U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 216 (Washington). 9, Texas (Cambridge). 9 (type), Texas (Phila- delphia). This species is in the Austroriparian fauna, but has been collected also in Ohio. Adults occur in spring and early Figures 142, 143.—Localities: 142 (left), Coccygomimus maurus; 143 (right), C. ellopiae. 4. Coccygomimus ellopiae (Harrington) Figure 326,1 Pimpla ellopiae Harrington, 1892, Canadian Ent., vol. 24, p. 99; <?, ? . Types: d\ 9 , Victoria, B. C. (Ottawa). Front wing to 12 mm. long; body moderately slender; face with close medium-sized punctures; apical margin of female clypeus broadly notched; metapleurum with fine oblique wrinkles which more or less obscure small dense punctures; nervulus briefly postfurcal or sometimes interstitial. Black. Maxillary palpus of male largely light brown; front of front femur, of front tibia, and of front tarsus of male, apex of mid- dle femur and of middle tibia of male, pale yellowish; front and middle tibiae and tarsi dark reddish brown except where described as yellowish; hind femur and hind tibia black to ferruginous; wings faintly infuscate; abdomen dark ferruginous, the ovipositor sheath black. Specimens from the northern part of the range have the hi id femur and tibia black, while those from the southern part have the hind femur and often the hind tibia ferruginous. The zone of inter- grades for this color difference seems to be broad, so it seems inadvis- able to erect a new subspecies for the southern type of coloration. We have seen specimens with both ferruginous and black hind femora and also intermediates from Stillwater Cove, in Sonoma Count}7-,. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original United States National Museum; Smithsonian Institution; United States.


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Keywords: ., bookauthorun, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectscience