PSYCHE A Journal of Entomology founded in 1874 by the Cambridge Entomological Club | ||
This article at Hindawi Publishing: https://doi.org/10.1155/1921/52645 The following unprocessed text is extracted automatically from the PDF file, and is likely to be both incomplete and full of errors. Please consult the PDF file for the complete article. 39211 Johnson-A New Phid for New England f" in the Oriental, one in Australia, and seven in North and Central America.' To these should be added three Oriental species of Suragina Walker, which, according to Bezzi,l is not generically distinct from Atherix. In addition, a number of fossil species have bein described from Baltic amber (Lower Oligocene) and from the Miocene shales of Florissant, Colorado.2 As suggested by Knab,3 it is by no means certain that all the species included at present in Atherix are congeneric. In this con- nection it is of considerable interest that the female of the Mexican Atherix longipes Bellardi has been reported as a fierce biter and blood-sucker, a habit unknown in the common European A. ibis and in the North American A. variegata.4- 3 Ann. Mus. Nat. Hungarici. 10, 1912, p. 446. 2 Atrichops hesperlus Cockerell, Canadian Entomologist, 46, 1914, p. 101. Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, 14, 1912, pp. 186-187. *Knab, F. Blood-sucking and supposedly blood-sucking Leptidse. Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, 14. 1912, pp. 108-110. A NEW PTJNID FOR NEW ENGLAND. Volume 28 table of contents |