. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. SCENOPINIDAE OF THE WORLD 157 Female.—Head dark red-brown; eyes red-brown with only a narrow postocular rim; frons rugose, slightly swollen above the antennae, no median groove; ocellar tubercle depressed, not cut off from frons, ocelli orange. Mouthparts brown, not large; palpi short; pile around oral opening brown, short. Antennae as in male. Thorax dark red-brown; humeral callus red-brown. Wings smoky brown, veins brown; halter stem red-brown, knob white. Legs with femora and tibiae red-brown, tarsi light red-brown. Abdomen red-brown. See


. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. SCENOPINIDAE OF THE WORLD 157 Female.—Head dark red-brown; eyes red-brown with only a narrow postocular rim; frons rugose, slightly swollen above the antennae, no median groove; ocellar tubercle depressed, not cut off from frons, ocelli orange. Mouthparts brown, not large; palpi short; pile around oral opening brown, short. Antennae as in male. Thorax dark red-brown; humeral callus red-brown. Wings smoky brown, veins brown; halter stem red-brown, knob white. Legs with femora and tibiae red-brown, tarsi light red-brown. Abdomen red-brown. See figure for details of eighth segment and Figure 105.—Scenopinus vanduzeei, new species, male, female: a, wing; b, c, lateral and frontal aspects of male head; d, e, lateral and frontal aspects of female head;/, g, enlarged details of male and female antennae; h-j, ventral, lateral and posterior aspects of male terminalia; k, ventral aspect of female 8th sternum; /, lateral aspect of female 8th and 9th segments; m, female 9th sternum and bursa. Length: Male body mm., wing mm.; female body mm., ^ving L8 mm. Type-locality: Mejia (island), Gulf of California, north of Angel dela Guarda, 30 April 1921 (E. P. VanDuzee) (29°30' N. 113°40' W.). Holotype: Male (CAS) 8929. Allotype: Female, same data (CAS). 108. Scenopinus velutinus (Kriiber) Figure 106 Omphrale velutina Krober, 1913, p. 203. Omphrale nubilipes Krober (not Say), 1928a, p. 2. The type of this species has been lost. There is, however, a paratype male in the National Museum and a long series of females from the type-locality which have been used to figure this 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. Dept. of the Interior. Washington :


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