(xJ 93./ %13,\, JibrarD of tbc llJuscum COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY, AT HARVARD COlLEfiE, CAJlBRIDfiE, 51ASS. The gift of tL I "^y^f^ No. (oHiX n ' /w_ THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY OF LONDON. SECOND SERIES— VOLUME III. ZOOLOGY. L O N DON: PHINTED BY TAYLOR AM) FRANCIS. BED LION COURT. FLEET STREET: SOLD AT THE SOCIETY'S APARTMENTS, BURLINGTON-UOUSE; AND BY LONGMANS, GHEEN, AND CO., PATEKNOSTER-ROAV. M.DCCC.LXXXVIII. a : .'b^ CONTENTS. A Revisional Monograph of Recent EphemeridcB or Ilaijflles. Bij Rev. A. E. Eaton, M.A. {Communicated hij Sir JoHX Lubbock, Bart., F.R.S., ex-Presidenl of the Lhmean Society.) Issued in six parts as follows : — Part I., pp. 1- 77, & Plates I -XXIV., loublished December 1883. „ II., „ 77-152, „ XXV.-XLV., „ July 1884. „ III., „ 153-230, „ XLVI.-LXIIL, „ April 1885. „ IV., ., 229-281, „ December 1885. „ v., „ 281-319, „ LXIV., LXV., „ December 1887. „ VI., „ 320-352, with Index and Titlepage, „ February 1888. TRANSACTIONS OP THE LINNEAN SOCIETY. I. A Bevisional Monograj^h of decent Bpliemeridce or Ilayjllcs. By the Bev. A. E. Eaton, M.A. {Commimicated by Sir John Lubbock, Bart,, F.B.S., Pres. Limi. Soc.) (Plates I.-LXV.) Part I. Read April 10th, 1883. Inteoductort Eemaeks. I HE present monograph is designed to facilitate the study of the Ephemeridte. On many accounts these insects are very eligible subjects for scientific research ; but so long as they are Ul known, and their exact identification a matter difficult of accomplish- ment, their employment in any branch of zoological learning is surrounded with dis- advantages too patent to need indication. Many points in the classification of the Ephemeridaj formerly doubtful receive elucidation in this work through the kind co-operation of entomologists of various nationality. An unprecedented wealth of material, through their means, has been avaUable for examination, every thing at their disposal likely to be in any way of service to me having been most courteously given or lent by them. The chief con- tributors of specimens have been Mr. E,. M^Lachlan, F.R.S., and Dr. H. A. Hagen, of Cambridge, Mass. I am also under great obligations to Mr. H. Albarda of Leeuwarden, Mr. C. Ritsema of Leyden, the Baron E. de Selys-Longchamps, M. Albert Mtiller of Berne, M. A. E. Vayssiere of Marseilles, and Dr. E. Joly of Toulouse. My thanks are also due respectively to the chief Entomologists or Directors of the British, Oxford, Brussels, Paris (Jardin des Plautes), and other museums, for permitting valuable specimens to be thoroughly examined by me. Many very choice Ephemerida; in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, Mass., forwarded by Dr. Hagen, and some remarkable species contributed by Mr. O. Salvin, demand particular acknowledgment. At an initial stage in the preparation of the letterpress, having decided to write in English, the question arose whether or not descriptions of the species should be given, or should the text treat of genera only. The various tints of yellow, brown, grey, and, in a lesser degree, of black, largely prevalent in the coloration of Ephemeridae, cannot be precisely defined in common English entomological terms so well as in Latin ; and SECOND SERIES. — ZOOLOGY, VOL. III. 1 2 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMERID.i: OR MATELIES. kindred species are often so nearly alike in colour that terms of precision are indis- pensable in describing the differences between them. When it was settled that the work should be written in its present form, the exigencies of the case were met by having recourse to a trade-colour pattern-book, as a standard of reference, sold by one of the principal artists' colour merchants in London. The samples display three or four gradations of each colour, — intense, medium, light, and sometimes very light. In my descriptions, colours of medium gradation are usually quoted without any qualifying adjective ; but in blacks, only the intense gradation is termed black, the medium being designated greyish black, or blackish. The light gradation in blacks and browns, or sometimes the lighter and lightest in a quadruple series of the latter, are referred to as greys of such and such a tint. Very light gradations of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, &c. are denoted as " extremely light," " the lightest possible tint," or " whitish," according to circumstances. During the interval which will elapse between the issue of the successive parts of this monograph, opportunities will doubtless occur of supplementing the illustrations of species. A list of all additional tigures not cited in the text relating to the species represented by them will therefore be given in the final part ; and references to them can be made addenda. Structure of the Ephemerid^e in General. — Adult. The Ephemeridaj are insects with a long, soft, ten-jointed, sessile abdomen, furnished at its hinder extremity with either two or three many-jointed setaceous or filiform tails (caudal setae), and whose body is smooth and glabrous. Head free, with atrophied mouth-organs, carinated epistoma, short subulate antennae, composed of two short stout joints succeeded by a slender many-jointed setaceous awn, three ocelli, and large oculi (compound eyes). Thorax robust ; mesothorax predominant ; sternum well developed ; fore wings ample, erect or spreading in repose, plaited lengthwise but not folded up (excepting when a female happens to be ovipositing under water, and then they are reclinate and compactly plicate like a closed fan) ; legs slender, femora strong, the fore coxre some- what distant from, the others. Abdomen armed with a pair of claspers (forceps), in the male placed ventrally at the extremity of the penultimate segment ; the vasa deferentia have each of them a separate iutromittent organ situated at the ventral joining of the ninth and tenth segments. In the female the oviducts terminate separately in the joining of the seventh and eighth segments ; there is no real ovipositor, but in some genera (e. g. Reptagenia) the apex of the seventh segment is produced beneath into a short rounded flap, and in one {Hagcmdus) this projection takes the form of a spout. In many genera there is a similar extension uf the ninth segment in one or in both of the sexes. Alimentary canal capa- cious, straight, filled with gas, and apparently destitute of salivary glands ; malpighian tubules in most instances indefinitely numerous, capillary, very long and entangled ; but in Prosoplstoma shorter, stouter in proportion, fewer in number, and combined into one common duct on each side. Tracheae filameutose or capillary, not sacculated, furnished EEV. A. E. EATON OK RECENT EPHEMEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. 3 with ten pairs of stigmata, two tlioracic and eight abdomiual. Ventral nervous tract slightly abbreviated, and posteriorly somewhat concentrated, in P rosopistoma ex- tremely so. Peculiarities in structural detail are often noticeable in both or one of the sexes, and are chiefly presented by the ocelli, wings, legs, and caudal setiB, and in the male by the oculi and forceps. The foremost ocellus is sometimes as large as the others, sometimes much smaller. The oculi, always much larger in the male than in the other sex, are in him, in some genera, divided each into two parts transversely ; the upper portion has larger facets than the lower, and is sometimes coloured differently from it. The division between these segments of the oculus may amount to nothing more than a mere superticial furrow or impressed line traversing the faceted surface horizontally ; but when it is deeper, the upper part of the oculus (always much the larger of the two) assumes a short, subcylindrical or turbinate form, faceted only on its summit, and supports on its outer base the smaller division, which is oval, and is faceted all over. The fore wings, seldom ovate or oblong, are usually trilateral, ample, and rounded off at the extremities. Their margins are unequal in extent, the costal or anterior margin being slightly (sometimes not much) longer than the terminal or outer margin (measured along the curve), and seldom less than double the length of the inner margin. The costal margin is somewhat sinuous as a rule ; nearly straight at the base of the wing, it generally presents a shallow sinus midway towards the apex, and then proceeds in a gradual salient curve to its extremity. The terminal margin is arched ; its curvature is sometimes stronger towards its extremities than in its midst, where it is occasionally almost straight. In the greater part of its course the inner margin is usually straight or incurved ; but there are cases in which it describes a salient curve continuous with that of the terminal margin. The wings are relatively longer in the female than in the male. The hind lobiys in some of the genera are not developed ; in others they are very minute ; at the most they are not particularly large. Their usual form is triangular, ovate, or oblong-ovate, with a salient prominence in front, either close to the wing-roots or midway towards the apex, in which last case the prominence is sometimes {e. g. in Rabr-ophlebia) followed by a deep sinus ; their neuration is fairly plentiful. When they are very minute their nervures are very scanty, and their form is usually oblong or linear-lanceolate. The inner margin of the fore wing and the anterior margin of the hind wing hitch together automatically to a larger or smaller extent when the wings are spread open. The iciiig-rnembrane is usually glassy and iridescent in the adult. In OUgoneuria and some other genera, however, the subimaginal pellicle of the wings is not shed, and these are dim in consequence (viewed as transparencies) ; their reflection too differs from that of the wings of other Mayflies in being either glossy instead of iridescent, or else (as in Lachkmia &c.) of uniform azure glow. Pigment is often deposited in the marginal and submarginal areas of the fore wings, and occasionally in all of the wings beside some of the nervures and cross veinlets as well as at the wing-roots ; by the confluence of 1* 4 EEV. A. E, EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. adjacent deposits blotches and fasciae are apt to be produced. The wing-membrane is decvirrent along the sides of the peak of the mesonotum ; in OUgonetiria and some allied forms it is there prolonged into short free subnlate tails, figured by Dr. Hagen in 1855. In most of the Ephemeridse, during the subimaginal stage, the wings are fringed with short cilise along the terminal margin. This fringe (excepting in Ccenis, Frosopistoma, and Trycorytlms) is not retained by the adult fly. JVing-neuration in the Ephemeridse is less complicated than it appears to be ; and Avhere difficulty is experienced in ascertaining the homologies of nervures, it is more likely to be occasioned by the suppression of some of them than from there being more in the wing than can be reasonably accounted for. Unstable in minutiee, so closely is the essential plan of the neuration adhered to by nearly related Mayflies, that the general facies of the wings is an important aid to their classification, aff'ording charac- teristics as easily recognizable as the style of branching in the case of trees. Its simplest modifications are displayed in Oligoneurians (PI. III.), its most complex in PI. VI. Throughout the whole series of figures illustrative of neuration, the special and serial homologies of the main nervures of the fore wing and hind wing are indicated by numerals (the same number being employed to denote the same nervure in every figure), and these are placed at the distal extremities of the following nervures, excepting the costa and the sutural nervures, whose numbers are not usually appended to tliem : — 1, the Costa, coincident with the anterior margin of the wing ; 2, the Subcosta ; 3, the Eadius ; 4, the Sector ; 5, the Cubitus ; 6, the Prtebrachial ; 7, the Pobrachial ; 8, the Anal ; 9\ 9- &c. Axillary nervures ; 10, the Sutural vein coincident with the inner margin. Between these nervures others of an adventitious nature that issue from the wing-margin in certain regions are often interpolated ; in many genera they do not remain free, but annex themselves to the adjacent main nervures, often acquiring the appearance and discharging the functions of branches of these. When necessary or advisable for purposes of elucidation, the numeral of the nervure, dashed, is repeated at the extremity of the hindermost adventitious branch. At a meeting of the Entomological Society of London, in February 1879, I remarked upon the tendency of the main nervures of the anterior wing in most of the Ephemeridse to be segregated into three groups, of which the first communicates directly with the thorax, the intermediate is either annexed to the first group, or terminates in the wino"- membrane adjacent to it, close to the base of the wing, while the third is associated with the prominent curved or augulated crease in the membrane which forms the boundary of a depression posterior to the great cross vein and close to the wing-roots. I men- tioned, further, that the anterior nervures of the hinder groups had a proneness to secede from their own set, and transfer themselves to the hindermost nervure of the grotip next in advance of them, so that in other orders of insects they are usually reckoned as branches of the nervures to which they have strayed. An extreme instance of such a transference is shown in the remarkable aberration floured in PI. VII. 11 c where the sector (4), accompanied by most of the neighbouring adventitious nervures, has usurped the trunk of the radius (3), so that this last nervure is not in direct con- tinuation with its own basis, but simulates a branch. EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHE.MEEID^ OR MAYFLIES. 5 Nervures of the fore icing. First group. — The costa (1), the subcosta (2), and radius (3), are strong simple nervures, nearly of the same length, and almost parallel with one another. Close to the base of the wing they are all connected by the great cross vein, and still nearer to the wing-roots the hinder two are again bound firmly by another strong cross vein. In Fal'mgenia and some other genera the costa and subcosta are liable to be folded back under the radius, so that this last appears to skirt the edge of the membrane for a considerable distance. In Massoi/euria (PI. III. 3) the subcosta is completely suppressed ; and in no case is the adventitious mediastinal ever developed in the Ephemeridte. Second group.— T\\q sector (4) and cubitus (5), the praebrachial (6) and pobrachial (7), are the main nervures of the second group. The sector and cubitus (excepting in genera allied to Oligoneuria, where one or both of them are suppressed) unite l)efore the middle of the wing, and their common trunk joins the prsebrachial towards its termination. The sector is usually reckoned as a branch of the cubitus by entomologists ; but it constitutes a separate nervure in the hind wings of many Ephemeridse. Excepting in wings very scantily nerved, the interval between tlie sector and cubitus is supplied with adventitious nervures, usually five in number, but sometimes three or sis. "When there are five of them, the fifth from the sector is the longest, the third the shortest of all, and the first is longer than the second. In Cloeon and some other genera cross veinlets afford the only communication between these and the main nervures ; but very fre- quently most of them combine with the first or fourth, and that unites with the sector, the fifth usually remaining alone. When the prsebrachial nervure is simple (excepting in allies of Oligoneuria) two adventitious nervvires are always interposed between it and the pobrachial nervure (PL XVI. & XVII.) ; when it is forked, its fork contains a single adventitious nervure, and its hinder branch is followed by the pobrachial nervure imme- diately Avithout the interpolation of any nervure whatever. The hinder branch of a forked prsebrachial nervure is therefore evidently homologous with the second adven- titious nervure, and should be accounted a false branch accordingly. The fork is ex- tremely deep in (kmipsurus and Folymitarcys (PI. V. & VI.). The pobrachial nervure, somewhat deserted by its fellows, is essentially a simple nervure, any branches which it may appear to have being (like those of the priebrachial) virtually adventitious nervures introduced between it and the anal nervure. Because in this as in the last instance referred to, when the pobrachial nervure is obviously simple (PI. XVI. & XVII.), two adventitious nervures intervene between it and the anal nervure (8), which sometimes annex themselves to the latter (PI. l.ll),\c); and when the second of them simulates a branch of the pobrachial, the fork thus formed contains a single adventitious nervure within it, and is follo^ved immediately by the anal. Sometimes each of them unites with the nervure to which it is nearest (PL V. 8«); in short, the combinations into which they enter with themselves and the adjoining nervures are almost as many as are possible. In Palingenia lonylcauda (PL I. 1 a), pro- vision seems to be made for the origination of several other adventitious nervures. Third G^-owj).— The anal (8) and the axillary' nervures (9', 9% &c.) complete the series of main nervures in the disk of the wing. The former, as a rule, subtends the anal 6 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMEEID^ OE MAYFLIES. angle directly, receiving some or all of the adventitious nervures that may happen to orio-inate in the interval between itself and the first axillary nervure. But there are many deviations from this rule. In genera related to Folymitm-cys and in Falingenia (PI. I., II., V. & VI.), from one to five adventitious nervures come between the anal nervure and the anal angle ; while in Bcetisca (PL XXL), where no nervure worthy of mention intervenes before the asillarics, the first and second nervures of this last group extend to the terminal margin between the said angle and the anal nervure. The usual interj)olated nervures in other instances are occasionally intercej)ted by the first axillary instead of by the anal nervure (PI. XI. 18, &c.). In several genera the last of these adventitious nervures sometimes assumes the aspect of a main branch of the anal nervure (PI. I.-III. &c.). The axillary nervures seldom extend beyond the middle of the inner margin ; but in Cloeon and its allies (PI. XVI. & XVII.) the first of them reaches to where the anal angle would be in wings of a more distinctly trilateral form, and in Bcetisca (as has been stated just above) both it and the second axillary nervure terminate beyond this angle. In OUffoneiiria and kindred genera the axillary nervures are either suppressed, or are represented only by a very few short obsolescent rudiments at the commencement of the inner margin. • By careful inspection of the third group of nervures, observing especially the disposi- tion of the proximal extremities of the main nervures along the prominent curved fold of the membrane, the form of the area contained by the fii-st axillarv nervure and the inner margin, or of that enclosed between the first and the second of the axillary nervures, and lastly, the general aspect of the adventitious and other nervures, the approximate afiinities of Ephemeridae to one another can be ascertained very easily. Cross veinlets, speaking generally, are of very small account in classification, though the contrary was formerly supposd. Their relative abundance or scarcity in the marginal area used to be considered as an item of prime importance ; but the sexes of the same species sometimes {e. g. certain species of Cloeon) difi'er from one another, in respect of this very particular, more than, in other instances, the species of different genera. They occasionally are serviceable in the distinction of species, more especially the veinlets in the pterostigmatic portion of the marginal area : in some genera these are indifferently simple or branched in individual examples of the same species, and their branches are apt to anastomose with one another. The nature of the series of anastomosing branches is obvious enough in actual specimens of the insects, but in figures of wings it is liable to be mistaken for an adventitious longitudinal nervure, as has recently been done by a distinguished entomologist. Several of the genera related to OUgoneuria have a peculiar arrangement of elevated folds and cross veinlets forming communications between the main nervures close to their proximal extremities, to which attention was first directed by Dr. Hagen in 1855. They are indicated in only one of my figures (PI. III. 2 o, ? ). Nervures of the Hind IFing. First Group. — A noticeable dillerence is perceptible in the composition of the first group of nervures in the hind wing, compared with the corre- sponding group in the other wing, because the cubitus (5) is transferred to it from the second group, and is annexed to the radius (3) either near the base (PI. I. 1 a), or EEV. A. E. EATOX ON EECENT EPHEMERID^ OR MAYFLIES. 7 nearer the middle of the wing (PL XII.), the sector and the adjacent adventitious nervures either remaining apart from both or forming a union with either of them. When the costa is not rounded oif at the extreme base, it almost always describes a salient ana-le in or before the middle of the anterior margin, after which it becomes approximated to the subcosta (2) ; and this last, when not straight nor evenly curved, is strongly arched towards its proximal extremity. The radius (3) takes a nearly direct course to "^he further border of the wing, near the apex, so that a relatively wide space is left between it and the subcosta : in Bcetisca it is interrupted, or obsolescent. The sector and adventitious nervures (4-4^) are suppressed in scantily nerved wings, but vary in number and in their combinations in other instances. The sector alone is present in some species of Campsurus (PL V. 8 i) ; but in most genera there are at least two adventitious nervures associated with it, the hinder oue of which visually unites with the sector, so as to form a fork, including its fellow. Another arrangement occurs sometimes in Polijniitarct/s (PL VI. 10 a) where three such nervures are interposed; In. Palmgeiiia {^\. I.) and Bcetisca (PL XXI.) there are perhaps five of them, whilst in most of the genera from Coloburus onwards, although the number of the adventitious nervures appears at tirst to be two, it seems reasonable upon closer inspection to recognize four of them, of which the third unites with the cubitus (5) to form a fork enclosing the fourth (1^), in the same manner as the second and sector enclose the tirst. Second Group. — The defection of the cubitus and sector from this group is compen- sated for by the transference of the anal (8) nervure to it. When adventitious nervures are interposed between the prgebrachial and the pobrachial (they are absent in Habro- phlebia, PL XIII.), they are more frequently associated with the former than with the latter nervure ; and it sometimes happens that the hindermost adventitious nervure (6') in genera related to Siphlurus, assumes equality with, or even predominates over, the prtebrachial (6). The adventitious ueuration intervening between the pobrachial (7) and anal (8) is of meagre extent when it is not suppressed. Third Group.— The axillary nervures (9), usually left behind by the anal (8), gene- rally occupy a very limited space in the hind wing ; they attain their highest develop- ment in Cliirotonetes and Oniscigaster (PL XIX. & XXI.). TJie legs present great diiferences in their condition, in the relative lengths of the several pairs, and in the proportions of the component parts of corresponding pairs. Some of these differences are sexuaL others are generical. Sometimes all of the legs are fuuc- tionless, — flaccid, filamentary rudiments of the tibiae and tarsi, or else atrophied miniatures of the same, definitely shaped, but thoroughly infirm, remaining attached to the femora ; in other instances such is the condition of only the two hinder pairs, and then the anterior pair may be either stout and short, or slender and long in either the male only, or in both sexes. The fore legs are always longer in the male than in tne female (usually very much so), and are generally longer than either of the hinder pairs ; but in the male of OUgonenria the fore leg is shorter than the intermediate. The hind legs are usually as long as, or shorter than, the intermediate ; but in Adeiiophlebia the middle pair is the shortest of all. The prolongation of the fore leg is chiefly due to the lengthening eitlier of 8 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPIIEMEEID^ OE MAYFLIES. the tarsus, or of the tibia, or of both of them ; but in the other legs it is generally brought about by extension of the tibia and femur. The fore tarsus is often as long as the tibia ; indeed in the male it frequently is much longer than it : the hinder tarsi are usually shorter, and only in a very few forms are they longer than it (e. cj. in Batisca, where the proximal joint of the tarsus by itself is as long as the tibia). The maximum number of tarsal joints is 5 ; the apical projection of the tibia which, in some genera, forms a basis for the insertion of the fore tarsus of the male, resembles at first sight a sixth joint, but it conforms in colour to the tibia and not to the tarsus. All of the tarsi may alike have five joints, or the fore tarsus may be five-jointed, while the others have only four distinct joints, and a very ill-defined trace of the fifth ; or all of them may have only four joints : in atrophied legs, however, the tarsi of the hinder legs may be two-jointed, or even jointless. The ungues of the fore tarsus are sometimes both alike in form and size ; bu.t this is often not the case : the same may be said of the ungues of the hinder tarsi, which further may resemble or differ from the ungues of the fore tarsus in form. The forceps of the male (specialized legs of the ninth abdominal segment) are seldom jointless (Ccenis, Campsurus, &c.), but are usually two-, three-, or four-jointed, with the basal joint or the next the longest. In some genera they afford good distinctive cha- racters of species. Much diversity is exhibited in the number and relative proportions of the caudal setse. They are often all of one length ; but the median seta is occasionally a little longer or a little shorter than the others, sometimes considerably shorter, frequently atrophied to a mere rudiment, and in many instances altogether cast off. The outer setae are always persistent (in the absence of accident), and either many times exceed, or else equal or fall short of, the body in length, according to sex or genus. The setse are commonly glabrous, or almost so, seldom pilose or plumose : their component joints, transverse in the basal portion, assume a more elongated form in the distal portion of the seta, where in some cases they attain rather attenuated dimensions. Habits of the Plies. The popular supposition, that Mayflies are strictly ephemeral, is fallacious in most instances. It is true that the adult insect cannot eat, owing to atrophy of its mouth-organs and to the condition of its alimentary canal ; but, provided that the air be not too dry, the imagines of many genera can live without food several days. Tradition states that Curtis kept a female Cloeon alive three weeks ; this is an exceptionally long period, for in general an individual in confinement becomes perceptibly shrunken within three days, and is dead by the fourth day, if not before. Apparently there is some correspondence between the length of time spent in the subimago stage and the duration of the life of the imago : when the former amounts to twelve or twenty-four hours and upwards, the latter lasts more than a day ; but when the change into imago takes place within a few minutes of the insect's quitting the nymph skin, its life is fugitive, passing away in the course of the evening or early morning. In some genera of sliort-lived Ephemerida3 the subimago skin is partially or altogether persistent in one or other of the sexes ; and such EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMERID^ OR MAYFLIES. 9 portions of it as may be shed are moulted while the insect is in full flight. Thus the males of Oligoneurla retain the pellicle in question u.pon their wings (the slough that may often he seen still dangling from their tails comprises exuviae of the body, legs, and setae only), whilst the females of Palu?ffenla, Campsurus, and some others, seem to throw off none of it at all. The males of these restless creatures have their hinder legs either atrophied or too feeble to support the body, and in most of the females the fore legs also are equally infirm and functionless. The longer-lived flies issue from the nymph-skin in a rather less matured condition than the others : then' legs are alwavs serviceable in both of the sexes ; and the subimago skin is always completely cast. The change from nymph to subimago is effected while the insect is floating at the surface of the water, buoyed up by gas which has accumulated wdthin the alimentary canal and between the new and the old integuments of the body. The moult having been transacted in the ordinary manner, the subimago, standing upon the water with the wings erect, awaits a favourable moment for flying to shelter. Fluttering steadily upwards it mounts aloft, sometimes to a considerable elevation, presently making its way to trees, walls, or herbage, &c., likely to afford it a suitable resting-place. There it assumes the posture characteristic of its genus during repose. It uiay stand either upon all of its feet, or upon only the two hinder pairs ; and the fore legs extended in advance, off the ground, may in this last case be held either close together or else apart from each other. The caudal setaj, in most instances diver- gent, are sometimes placed alongside of one another horizontally, or slanting upwards. Adult diurnal Ephemeridre, in hot weather, seek repose during the heat of the day, limiting their flight to the cooler hours of sunlight, or, at most, extending it later in the evening till just after sunset. In cold disagreeable weather they seldom fly at all, but remain under shelter. Many persons are familiar with the mode of flying habitual to some of the more conspicuous Mayflies (especially the males), which, by tlie intermittent action of the wings, results in a dance-like motion almost vertically up and down, — a fluttering swift ascent, and tlien a passive leisurely fall, many times repeated. The body during the rise is carried in a position very little out of the perpendicular, with the legs extended upwards in advance, and the setas trailed behind; and this is thepostm-e main- tained by Septa rjenia and its allies (only their sette are divergent) whilst hovering head to windward, which has led to their being locally designated in the valley of the Axe (Devon) "Yellow Uprights." During the descent, the body, less steeply inclined, is steadied by the half-spread motionless wings and the outstretched setae and legs. The males of Ccenis sometimes jerk themselves downwards impetuously in their dance, instead of subsiding without effort ; and the females of Ephemerella, while flying horizontally onwards, have a haliit of dipping frequently in their flight. Conspicuous objects near water, such as roads, hedges, and shrubs, as well as the streams inhabited by the nymphs, are favourite rendezvous of the dancers, and therefore good sites for collecting the adult flies. In mountain-glens and wooded ravines prominent light-coloured rocks often serve to attract them ; but frequently in such situations their diversions proceed beyond the range of the net. When this is so, it is advisable to watch for subimagines rising frona the water, and carry them home alive in bottles, to undergo their moult. The bottles must be kept cool, and neither very dry inside nor visibly damp ; and it is sometimes necessary to place SECOND SERIES. — ZOOLOGY, VOL. III. 2 10 REV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMERID.E OR MAYFLIES. within the bottle a piece of paper, secured from shaking about, to afford foothold to the captives. A woollen wrapper round the bottle, and three or four drops of water upon the paper, meet these requirements ; and in very warm weather the bottles can be carried in a mat basket. Subimagines of certain genera issue only at particular times of the day ; as a rule, the afternoon and evening are the best periods for collecting them. In the morning specimens harbouring amidst branches of shrubs and trees overhanging streams can be procured by beating into the net. Nocturnal species may advantageously be looked for in spiders' webs, and on lamps, adjacent to rivers ; and wherever such lamps happen to be close to white walls or placarded hoardings, numbers of specimens are apt to be attracted by the illuminated surfaces. Subimagines of Bmtis and sundry other genera may frequently be found clinging to Sparganium and grass at the borders of streams, a few inches above the level of tlie water. Many species tliat fly by night appear on the wing before dark. They are most of them short-lived. The ordinary flight of Oligoneuria is rapid, the insects sweeping swiftly to and fro, far up and down the stream, with flurried bustling movements, very similar, indeed, to those of LeptoceridjB, the females for the most part close to the surface, and the males a few feet above it, while now and again a female hurries aloft pursued by a jostling throng of admirers amidst whom she very soon sinks down again encumbered towards the water. Upon occasion, however, they behave differently. During one or two nights only in the course of the season, in favourable weather, innumerable multi- tudes of these flics issue after sundown from the river, filling the air, like snowflakes in a storm, to a very considerable height (M. Albert Miiller observed some at an altitude of 500 feet above the E,hine at Basle), and advancing steadily in one direction. Species of other genera, such as Falingenia and Polymitarcys, have a similar habit of swarming, and so also have certain kinds of Ephemera and Hexagenia. Ccenis has been observed in East Central Africa flying in dense clouds that resembled smoke in the distance. Most of the Ephemeridte couple during flight, the male lowermost. Darting at his mate from below, and clasping her prothorax with his eloutjated fore tarsi (whose articulation with the tibia is so constructed as to admit of supination of the tarsus) he bends the extremity of his body forwards over his back, grasps with his forceps the hinder part of her seventh ventral segment, and with his outer caudal setse embraces her sixth segment. These two setae exhibit near their origin a strongly marked articulation, where they can be deflected abruptly so as to lie forwards over the back of the female parallel with one another betvt^een her wings. Meanwhile the couple gradually sink, the female not being quite able to support herself and mate ; and by the time they reach the ground, if not before, their connexion is usually terminated, although a pair of Ecdyurus has been seen by me to maintain union effectively as long as six or seven minutes after they had come to rest. Soon after their disengagement the male flies away to resume his interrupted gambols (being prone to polygamy), and the female after resting awhile repairs to the water to lay her eggs. Many of the females are polyandrous. The male of PaUngeuia has very short fore legs ; and he is mated, not in mid air, but upon the river amidst crowds of rivals, who pile themselves up upon him and his sur- roundings until he is overwhelmed by a large struggling mass of them floating dowji the REV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EP1IEMERID.E OR MAYFLIES. 11 stream like a heap of foam, whose resting-place (in New Guinea, at least) is generally found in the mouth of a big fish. [See below, under Palingcnia ixipuana.'] OVIPOSITION AND THE EgG. Oviposition is usually performed in fresh water; a Cingalese Palmffenia, howeyer, inhabits an estuary where the water occasionally must be brackish. Some short-lived species discharge the contents of their ovaries completely en masse, and the pair of fusi- form or subcylindrical egg-clusters laid upon the water rapidly disintegrate, so as to let the eggs sink broad-cast upon the river-bed. The less perishable species extrude their eggs gradually, part at a time, and deposit them in one or other of the following manners : — either the mother alights upon the water at intervals to wash off the eggs that have issued from the mouths of the oviducts during her flight; or else (Eaton, Trans. Ent. Soc, London, 1873, p. 401) she creeps down into the water — enclosed within a film of air, with her wings collapsed so as to overlie the abdomen in tlie form of an acute narrowly linear bundle, and with her setfe closed together — to lay her eggs upon the underside of stones, disposing them in rounded patches, in a single layer evenly spread, and in mutual con- tiguity. This has been witnessed by me several times, and in the case of several species of Baetis. The female on the completion of her labour usually floats up to the surface of the water, ineffectively swimming with her legs, and, on emerging, her wings all at once are suddenly unfolded and erected ; she then either flies away, or (as often happens) if her seta? have chanced to liecome wet and cannot ])e extricated from tlic water, she is detained by them until she is drowned. In some instances, however, the female dies under water beside her eggs. The eggs, indefinitely numerous, are diversiform according to the genus, some being subrotund, others elliptical. An appendage of various relative size is in certain cases present at one end of the c^g ; for example, in Ccenis it is narrowly crescentic, but in FyphemereUa it nearly equals the yolk itself in size, and forms in combination with it a somewhat figure-of-8-shaped mass. The dixration of the egg-stage varies with the temperature to which the eggs are exposed. Some of Folijmitarcijs virgo, kept in Dr. N. Joly's laboratory at Toulouse, were hatched about six or seven months after they were laid. Professor L. Calori (1848) and Dr. E. Joly (1877) have recorded instances of larvi- parition observed by them in Cloeon diptermn. Although they supposed that the young were produced from impregnated eggs retained within the mother, perhaps for some weeks, it may be conjectured, with equal if not greater probability, that these were the produce of unfertilized ova advanced to maturity within the nymph and hatched as soon as she became an imago. In the absence of elaborate contrivances, many Ephemeridse can be bred in captivity if confined in flower-pot saucers, or other wide vessels, containing very little water, duly protected from extremes of temperature. If the bottom be glazed inside, it should be thoroughly strewn over with sand or fine river-gravel, that the insects need not die of fatigue in struggling to maintain their footing upon it. Banunculus should not be 2* 12 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPIIEMEEIDiE OE MAYFLIES, planted in the pans, because the sap exuding from its broken stems appears to be poisonous to these animals. The Young of the Ephemerid^. The term "nymph" is employed in this work to designate all the subaqueous stages in the development of the young after it is hatched. The old-fashioned usage of " larva " and " pupa," borrowed from the terminology of other Orders to denote respectively the wingless and wing-budding grades of the nymph, seem scarcely worth retention ; for they do not indicate precisely any definite epochs of particular importance in the life-history of these animals. Nymphs are young which lead an active life, quitting the egg at a tolerably advanced stage of morphological development, and having the mouth-parts formed after the same main type of construction as those of the adult insect. Mayfly nymphs mostly feed upon either mud or minute aqviatic vegetation, such as covers stones and the larger plants ; but (judging by tlieir mandibles and maxilla?) some must be predacious. Many of them live in concealment in the banks or under stones in the bed of streams, rivers, and lakes ; others ramble openly amongst water-weeds and swim with celerity. Certain genera are restricted exclusively to large rivers ; and one of these {Palingenia) is said to remain a nymph three years. Gloeon {teste Sir John Lubbock) moults twenty-three times, and is probably bred much more expeditiously than Palingenia ; it is one of the genera found in streams, ditches, and ponds, or the shallow parts of lakes. Besides the influence of flood and drought, or constancy of supply, the climate of the water is largely concerned in determining the fitness or unsuitability of a particular site for particiflar kinds of Ephemeridae. A knowledge of the water-climate needed by a species renders intelligible the limitations of its geographical and local distribution. The temperature of the ordinary land-springs in a district enables the climate of other water iu that neighbourhood to be ascertained readily by comparison with it. If the water of a given site exhibits marked difi'erences in temperature from the standard of the neighbourhood, according to the season or the time of day, its climate is extreme, and the site cannot be inhabited by species which require relatively cold water. The newly hatched nymphs are destitute of any visible muscular, nervous, circulatory, or reproductive system ; their alimentary canal is incomplete ; and, being too small to requii-e sjiecial breathing-apparatus, they respire through the integument at large. The abdomen is 9-jointed, and the anteunaj and caudal seta^ have likewise fewer articulations, and are less hairy than those of more advanced nymphs. Pohjmitarcys possesses the third caudal seta even before it is hatched ; but Clocon is born without any trace of it, and developes it gradually at a later period (Joly and Lubbock). During the first few days after their birth the young cast their skin several times, the intervals between the moultings lengthening by degrees (Lubbock). Blood-globules and rudiments of the tracheal branchitc begin to appear simultaneously when the insect is eight or ten days old ; the latter bud forth from th.e hinder lateral angles of some of the abdominal segments, and (like the parts of the mouth) are modified considerably in detail before they acquire their ultimate shapes (Joly). EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMERID^ OR MAYFLIES. 13 Adolescence is evidenced by the advancement towards maturity of the reproductive organs internally, and externally by the outgrowth of rudimentary wings from the hind borders of the proper segments. The forceps of the male also begin to bud forth, and in certain genera an extension of the apical integument of the penultimate ventral segment becomes perceptible in the female. Characters and FeettUarities of the Nymjih. — In their general form most nymphs nearly resemble the adult. Prosopistoma is exceptional in having the body oval in outline, convex above and flattened beneath ; and it possesses the faculty of adhering firmly by suction, like a limpet, to stones. A N. -American ally of Ephcmcrella (PL XXXIX.), longer in the body than Prosopistoma, is furnished with concavities on the pectus and venter that are densely pilose, which appear to aiTord it a similar power. Many other genera have the body of the nymph dilated and flattened beneath more than it is in the imago, but not Avith any view to its employment as a means of adhesion. Head diversiform, prominent, usually about as wide as the thorax, vertical or else pretense; cranial sutures mostly distinct. Labrum (when present) transverse, emar- ginate in front, and rounded off at the anterior corners ; when it is absent, a velvety fold of the palate-membrane completes the enclosure of the mouth opening immediately above the mandibles at a distance from the edge of the epistoma. Frons usually even, but sometimes (e. g. in Ephemera) produced into short projecting points. Ocelli three, small. Oculi moderate, becoming large in the adolescent male. Antenna! slender and tapering (their first two joints the stoutest), usually many-jointed and long, but some- times few-jointed, very short and subulate; in many genera the joints are nearly bald, whilst in others (e. g. Epihemera) they arc Ijcset near their tips each with a whorl of long spreading hair. Mandibles strong, with more or less asymmetrical dentition, which com- prises usually a molar surface in addition to fang-like lobes ; but in some predatory genera (Pis. XLIII. & LIII.) the molar region is wanting. The cndopodite is often represented by a slender jointless movable appendage attached to the inner base of the inferior lobe (as in Sii)]ilurii.s, PI. L.), or sometimes by a tuft of hair [Ecdijurus, PI. LXIL). The lobes are remarkably abrupt in Bactls (PI. XLIV.). The outer lateral region of the mandible in a Palinfjeuia from Ceylon (PL XXV.) is produced into a massive enlargement continuous with the crown ; in Potamanthus it is armed with a tooth-like tubercle (PI. XXXI.); in Polijmitarcijs, Ephemera, &c. it is extended into a strong tapering tusk, distinct from the crown, variously furnished outside with tubercles (Pis. XXVIII. & XXX.); this prolongation is more slender in Euthi/plocia and densely hairy (PI. XXIX.). First maxilla unaccompanied by a galea, its inner edge generally either hairy or rigidly setulose, but sometimes spinose, the point often pungent, the crown variously armed, sometimes with long fine hair distributed evenly upon it (Oliffoiwuria, Poli/mitarci/s, Pis. XXVI.-XXVIII.), sometimes with a dense beard of harsh hair, as in Ealrophlehia (PL XXXVL), at other times with pectinate spinules, as in Chirotonetes, MhUhrogena, &c. (Pis. XLIX., LIV., &c.). Palpus of first maxilla usually 2-, 3-, or 4.-jointed, according to the affinities of the genus [but in one instance multi-articulate (PL LIII.)], and of various relative length,— extremely long in Eiithj- plocia (PL XXIX.), very short in Ep)hemerella and its kindred (Pis. XXXVII.-XL.). 14 HEV. A. E. EATON ON liECENT EPIIEMERID.E OE MAYPLIES. Second raaxillsc, when present (in OUgoneuria they are either suppressed, or else are reduced to the condition of raised folds traversing- the upper surface of the lahium, PL XXVI.), simple and usually flattened ; palpus 2-jointed in allies of Palingenia and Ecdyurus (though in this latter group of genera the last joint may essentially be compounded of two), 3-jointed in most other instances, but in one remarkable case (PI. LIV.) multiarticulate ; it usually tapers towards its extremity, but is sometimes enlarged or expanded, whilst in BcBtisca (PL LII.) it is actually forcipate. Labium in the large majority of genera plane and bipartite, with lobes as large as, or smaller than, the lacinise of the second maxillae. In a few cases it is undivided, and is then either plane and creased lengthwise through the raxMlQ {Oligonenr'm, PL XXVI. ), or else is conduplicate {FaUngenia, PL XXV. ; ToJumltareys, PL XXVIIL). Tongue (glossa) and paraglossa? membranous or pergamentose, the former usually inflated and often concave in the middle, generally broad, and citlicr as long as or shorter than the paraglossse. The following are their leading modifications : — paraglossse broad ; tongue ovate (Pis. XXV. & XXVI. , Pctllngenia ani OUgoneuria), subrotund (PL XXVII. JoUa), oblong and entire (PL XXXIII. Bla'sturus), emarginate (Pis. XXIX. & XXX., Eiifhy- plocia and Ephemera), obcordate (PL XXXI. Poiamanthns), retuse, with claw-like lateral projections (Pis. XXXIV. & XXXV., Ghorotcrpes and Thraiilus), raucrouate, and in combination with the paraglosste rather like a mitre or a birctta seen broad-wise (Pis. XLV.-XLVII., Bai'tis and allies) : — paraglossaj narrow and recurved, tongue broad and bifid (PL XXXVI. , Habropldebia). In some genera both glossa and para- glossa) appear to be absent ; Prosopistoma seems to have none. Thorax compact or subcompact, rigid ; pectus rather broad ; prothorax usually well developed and more distinct than the metathorax from the mesothorax ; but in Baitisca and some few other genera (Pis. XLIIL, LII.) the pronotum is intimately blended with the mesonotum. Ecdyurus and many of its kindred have the head and pronotum bordered at the sides with a membranous expansion seemingly subservient to the oxygenation of intratracheal air. The winglets of advanced nymphs are united by their inner margins to the apical borders of their proper segments, and overlie the base of the abdomen. In nearly mature nymphs of OUgoneuria (PL XXVI.), and in even less aged specimens of genera related to EphemereUa (Pis. XXXVII.-XL.), the space included between the terminal margins of the fore wings and the peak of the mesonotum becomes closed over by a membrane in continuity with the same, extending almost up to the extre- mities of the wings. This membrane is produced backwards still farther in Prosopistoma and Bcetisca (Pis. XLIII. & LII.), so as to form in combination with the wings a hood which completely roofs over the tracheal branchiaj and the segments that bear them. Pormerly the construction of this shield was not quite understood, the whole of it being attributed to hypertrophy of the mesonotum ; but one of Dr. Hagen's gifts of specimens furnished the means of explaining its composition rightly. Coxa) usually prominent, but not so in Prosojnstoma (I. heia.era, Balingenia (= Bolymitarcys, Hexagenia, Campsurus, and the restricted Palingenia), % Baetis (= Ueptagenia, and a species of Atalophlehia), Pota- manthus {= the restricted Potamanthus, LeptoiMebia, Kabrophleltia, and Ephemerella), Clo'e (= Baetis, Centroptilum, Callibcetis, and Cloeon), Ccenis, and Oligonenria. Pictet foresaw that some of the species referred by him to the genera Palingenia and Pota- manthus Avould probably prove to be incongruous, but was precluded by lack of materials from verifying his suspicions. He also surmised correctly that the neuratiou of the anterior wings in detail would furnish characters towards their discrimination, adding: — *' Mais j'ai repugne a entrer pour cela dans une analyse aride, longue et minuticuse ; j'ai craint de rendre plus diflicile encore riutelligence des descriptions;" but he did not attach much importance to the tarsal characters. If he had known of the name of LeptophJehia in time he would have used it instead of Potamanthus, although, as he remarks, this last is more comprehensive in its application than the former. In 18G2 an account of some Illinois species of Ephemerida? was published by the late 3* 20 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID^ OE MAYFLIES. Mr. B. D. Walsh. The classification of the genera was determined by an application of almost the same principles as were adopted by Burmeister, and is as follows : — J Ba'etis, comprising three sections (Sect. A = Siphlurus ; Sect. B = Chirotonetes ; Sect. C = Bhi- tlirogena) ; Fotamantlms (= Blasturus) ; FaUngenia with three sections (named by him in the following year : A, Pentagenia ; B, Hexagenia ; C, Reptagenia) ; Ephemera, Ephemerella, Bcetisca; Clo'e containing three sections (A = CaUibcetis ; B = species of Callihcetis and Baetis ; C = Cloeoii) ; and Ccenis. Dr. Hagen, in 1863, used Pictet's genera in a revised order, alluding only incidentally to forms foreign to Great Britain : — Oligoneuriu, Cceiiis, PaUngenia, Ephemera, Pota- manthus, % Baetis, and Cloeoii (= Cloe). In 1868 a systematic catalogue of genera with named types, and with notes on their geographical distribution, was published by me in the 'Entomologist's Monthly Magazine.' My attempts to describe the wings in an intelligible manner, in the absence of illustra- tions, were, to say the least, abortive. The genera stood thus : — Ccenis, Tricorythus, Oli- gonetiria (with three sections), Campsurns (with two unreal sections), Polymitarcys, PaUngenia, Pentagenia, Hexagenia, Ephemera, Poto^nanthus, Leptophlehia (with two sections), Bcetisca, Colohurus, Siphlurus, and Reptagenia (with two sections). In the same year, while describing the nymph of Cainis, I adduced reasons for trans- ferring this genus from the position near Baetis and Clo'eon, assigned to it by Pictet (on account of the simplicity of its wing-neuration), to the neighbourhood of Leptophlehia, series 2 (= Rabrophlehia), and likewise for the removal of Oligoneuriu, ranked next after Ccenis by Pictet, to the vicinage of PaUngenia, changes that were carried out in my work on the Ephemeridne in 1871, when a few minor alterations involving no principle in the successiou of genera were also made. The structure of the tracheal branchiae of the nymph was taken as the basis of classi- fication of Ephemeridae by Dr. A. Vayssi^re in his ' Thesis ' presented to the Paculte des Sciences de Paris, and published in the ' Annales des Sciences Naturelles ' in 1882. He arranged the genera in five groups : — 1, those having fringed branchial laminae, Lepto- phlehia (= Hahrophlebia), Ephemera, Potamanthus, and Polymitarcys ; 2, those with laminae devoid of fringes, Oniscigaster, Cloeopsis (= Cloeon), % Cloeon (= — — ?), f Cen- troptihim (= Baetis); 3, those with simple laminae furnished at the base with either a tuft of fibrils, Reptagenia (= Ecdyurus), Oligonetiria, Jolia, or a bifid appendage bearing- very delicate imbricated lamellae, Ephemerella ; 4, those whose second jjair of brauchia afford protection to the following pairs, Tricorythus and Ccenis; 5, "les larves dont I'appareil respiratoire est completement cache ct protege par des jirolongements mesotho- raciques dans I'epaisseur desquels naitront j)lus tard les ailes superieures," Bcetisca and Prosopistoma. I examined and named the type specimens of this Thesis at Avignon in August 1880 ; but the indications affixed to the phials appear to have become confused. To the best of my recollection the specimens representing % Cloeon were junior examples of something which I suspected might be Centrojytilum or Ba'etis ; but I did not ascertain which. The additional knowledge of Ephemeridas gained since 1871 has not yet necessitated any material departure from the sequence of the genera which I adopted. A few minor EEV. A. E. EATOX OX EECEXT EPHEMEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. 21 alterations have been made (such as the establishment of genera in place of provisional sections) and a remarshalling of the members of certain alUances ; and besides this, some genera, then isolated, have become rallying-points of new alliances ; but these changes have not disturbed the scheme as a whole. The plan upon which it has been drawn up may be described as based upon conclusions derived from comparisons of adult insects checked and modified by others educed from the study of younger specimens. The o-eneral effect of this plan has been to bring into the middle of the series genera of hardy habit that moult completely at the last ecdysis, that have functional legs with four distinct tarsal joints, and have the oculi of the adult male either bipartite or ascalaphoid. The ends of the series are occupied by genera that have the oculi of the d furrowless and undivided, those having weak or functionalless hinder legs with at most four distinct joints to the tarsus, whose eggs are discharged in bulk, and whose Life is truly ephemeral, commencing the series ; and those whose legs are all efficient with five distinct joints to the tarsus, whose oviposition is gradual, whose life in the adult condition is measured bv days, if it attain its full natural term, and whose last moult is complete, bringing the series to its close. The scheme is open to objections attendant upon all linear arrano-e- ments in zoology, individual genera here and there having to be ranked in groups with whose formulated definitions they are largely at variance during some portion of their existence. The subjoined Table exhibits the system of classification ; generical details of the adult flies are illustrated in the first 24 plates, and the numbering of the genera quoted in the Table accords with the numerals assigned to them in the writing of those plates. Table of the Classificatiox of Genera of the Ephehered^ NUMBERED AS IN PlATES I.-XXIV. Family EPHEMERID^. Group I. Series I. Section 1 of Palingenia Genera 1-6. „ 2 oi Polymitarcys „ 7-10. Series II. Section 3 of Ephemera Genera 11-13. Group II. Series I. Section 4 of Potamanthus Genera IJ^IS. Series II. Section 5 oi Leptophlebia... Genera 16-2S. ,, 6 oi Ephemerella „ 24, 24- dis &c. Series III. Section 7 oi Ctenis Genera 25, 25 ii«, 26. „ 8 of Prosopistoma 27. Serie IV. Section Q oi Baetis Genera 28-31. 22 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID^ OE MAYFLIES. Group III. Series I. Section 10 of Siphlurus Genera 32-36. „ 11 oi Btetisca » 37. Series II. (provisional). Section 12 (provisional) Gemis Plate LII. Series III. Section 13 of Atopopus Genera 38-10. ,, \-i oi Ecihjurus „ 41-46. It may be noted of tlie foregoing Table that the composition of the section of Folymt- tarcys is not altogether homogeneous. Genus 7, Ei(thi/plocia, may eventually have to rank as a separate section, on account of its triarticulate palpi. Section 8 is associated in the same series as section 7, because the adult Prosopistoma ? , in the construction of its head and thorax, is, according to M. Vayssiere's representation, very similar to Ccenis. This last genus, ' in some particulars, resembles insects of the Folymitarciis section ; but, on account of the formation of the nymph, it appears to be more nearly related to the section of Ephemerella than to the genera of section 2. The provisional section 12 is classed in Group III. on account of the nymph having some resemblance to genera of section 10 in the form of the laciniae of its lower maxillae and the lobes of the labium. On the other hand, its hinder tracheal-branchiaj are con- structed after the same plan as those of the genera in section 14. As a matter of pure conjecture, it may be suspected of belonging to section 13, of which no nymphs have hitherto been seen ; only if such were the case, it is probable that the tibiae would be somewhat shorter than they are in comparison with the tarsi. Systematic Description, group i. of the genera. Adult. — At the fore-wing roots the anal nervure (8) meets the pobrachial nervure (7) ; the hinder tarsi, when not atrophied, have four distinct joints, and sometimes an ill- defined fifth joint intimately concrete Avith the tibia ; 6 oculi evenly contoured. Nijmxjli. — Palpi of the 2nd maxillae (" labial palpi ") 2-jointed (except Euthyplooiu, 3-jointed). First Series of Group I. Legs of the adult ? short in proportion to the body, and feeble, when not functional- less, through atrophy of the tibia and tarsus ; the fore legs in both sexes of the subimago extremely short, and transversely rugose ; hind legs of adult 5 the longest pair. Nymph. Palpi of 1st maxillEe very stout, 2-jointed (excej)t Euthyplocia 3-jointed) and curved. Section 1 of the Genera. — Type of Faliugenia. — Subcosta of the fore wing, when de- veloped, retired within a fold of the membrane somewhat beneath the radius. In many genera the subimaginal pellicle of the wings is not shed at the last moult. Nymjjh fos- sorial or predatory ; in those that are known the median lobe of the tongue is pointed. Subsection A. Wing-neuration complete and plentiful ; anal nervure (8) of the fore wing either sinuous, or else from the wing-roots to its fork nearly straight, and afterwards gently arched; axillary nervures short but strong; the first (9') annexed to the anal EEV. A. E. EATO^S' ON RECENT EPHEMEEID^ OR MATPLIES. 23 nerviu'e (8) at tlie wing-roots, the second (9-) ending apart from it in the regular raised axillary fold or vessel ; wiug-membrane translucent and dull. Pronotum large, trans- verse, broader than the head, tumescent, arched behind. Setae pubescent or minutely pilose, short in ? , very long and divaricate in d . Forceps borne upon a deflexible laminar lobe prolonged from the distal ventral margin of the 9th segment, which is not represented in the ? , the proximal joints of the limbs the longest. Lobes of the penis unarmed ; orifice of the seminal duct subapical, and on the inner side of the lobe. Eyes of the 6 large, oval, narrowly separated from each other ; anterior ocellus much smaller than the hinder two. Pore tibia and tarsus densely rugose transversely ; ungues in each tarsus unequal, and not quite alike. Nymph fossorial ; the labium concave, its sides approximated to each other above ; the tracheal branchiae borne upon protuberances armed with single minute spinules, situated in or near the middle of the sides of their respective segments, and arched upwards over the dorsum ; the hinder lateral angles of the segments not produced backwards. Pore legs stout, densely bearded with long hair on the femur and tibia ; the tibia and tarsus compressed, the former oblique at the tip. Terminal margin of the fore wings free. The single genus contained in this subsection is a composite one ; but further materials are needed to enable the incongruous species to be completely dissociated from the type. They may be referred provisionally to three subgenera: — JPalingenia (typical), Burmeister, containing European and Western Asiatic species ; Anagenesia, containing Indo-Malay, and a Siberian species ; and a nameless subgenus containing Brazilian species. PALINGENIA, Burm. 1839; restricted Eaton, 1868. Illustrations. Adult (details) PI. I. & III. 1 «-!/ (whole figures), see citations under P. longicauda. Nymph PI. XXV., see also citations of Swam., Gorove, and especially Corn. (18-18) under P. longicauda (whole figures and details). Subgenus Palingexia (typical). Adult.— Vrcohv^chivil nervure (6) of the fore wing forked beyond the middle ; two con- spicuous sets of longitudinal nervures proceed in pairs to the terminal margin (at 4<\ and at 5 & 6). Pore tarsus of 6 about twice and a half (2f ) as long as the femur. Seta3 2, in the 6 upwards of three times as long as the body, in ? about the same length as the body. Anterior thoracic spiracle gaping, large ; aperture bivalvular, the lower valve the smaller, with concave margin ; the upper valve sinuous, having a large salient obtusely rounded lobe projecting inwards in front of the tegulae. Orifice of the posterior thoracic spiracle gaping, irregularly reniform with the siniis in front. Nymph, [after Cornelius].— Six pairs of abdominal tracheal branchiae, each lamina fringed with short simple fibrils, and perhaps folded together lengthwise. Seta? about I as long as the body in the female. DistriJjut/ou. Eastern N. temperate region. Tyjye. P. longicauda (in Ephemera), 01. Etymology, TraXiyyeveu, in allusion to its annual swarming. 24 REV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHE-AIEEID^ OE MAYELIES. Palingenia longicauda, Oliv. Plate I. 1 « (wings, legs, d 2 , head and forceps, 6 adnlt). Hemerobius, Clutius, Opusc. 2, cap. viii. (frontispiece), p. 100 (1634). Ephemerum, Swam., Epliem. vita (1675) ; idem, ed. Tyson, p. 44, pis. i.-iv. and v. 2 (young) ; pi. v. 1, 3, &c., viii. [adult] (1681); SchiefFer, Ic. iii. tab. cciv. 3 (1776). Ladislaus Gorove, alias Stefan Goseve, in Tudomanyos gyiij tem^ny, viii. [Egy kulonos tiinemenynek, az ugynevezett Tisza viragzas nach leiraza], pp. 22, tab. 1, a-c (young), e (last moult), f (slough), g c?, d $ im. [A very full account] (1819) . Reprinted by Mocsary, in Rev. d. Inhaltes der Termeszetrajze Furzetek, ii. 124-5, and (German- text) natiir. historische. Heft ii. Bd. ii. u. iii. 181-2) (1878). Ephemera longicauda, Oliv., Euc. Meth. vi. 418 (1791) ; Latreille, H. N. xiii. 96 (1805) ; Lamarck, H. N. ed. i. iv. 221 (1817) ; ! Ramb., Nevropt. 295 (1842). E.flos-acjiue, Illiger, Mag. f. Ins. i. 187-8, no. 17 (1802); Treipke, Stet. ent. Zeit. i. 54-8 (1840). E. Sivammerdiana, ! Lat., H. N. xiii. 96 (1805) ; idem, Gen. iii. 184 (1807) ; Cmder, R. A. ed. I. iii. 430 (1817) ; ditto, ed. II. v. 244 (1829); Lamarck, H. N. ed. I. iv. 221 (1817) ; Blancbard, H. N. Ins. iii. 54 (1840) ; idem, in Cuv., R. A., ed. Crochard, xiii. 91 (1848). E. Swammerdamiana, Sliaw, Gen. Zool. vi. part 2, pi. Ixxxii. (1806). X Semblis marginata, Panzer, in Explic. Scbajf. Ic. cciv. (1804). Palingenia longicauda, Burmeister, Haudb. ii. 803 (1839) ; H.-Schtef., Fn. Ratisb. 346 (1840) ; Pictet. Nat. Hist. Ndwopt. ii. Epbem. 155, pis. xiv. xiv bis, xvi. (1843-45) ; Cornelius^ Beitr. z. Kenntu. d. P. lofigicauda, pp. 38, pis. i.-iv. (1848) ; Walker, Cat. 549 (1853) ; Hagen, Stet. ent. Zeit. xv. 316-19 (1854); Perty, Die Zool., Th. ii. 344-45 (1855) ; Hag., Stet. ent. Zeit. xx. 431 (1859); Loew, Verb, zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, xi. 409-10 (1861) ; Corn., Stet. ent. Zeit. xxiii. 465-66 (1862) ; Gerstacker, Handb. d. Zoologie, ii. 59-61 (1863) ; Karsch, Die Insectenwelt, v. 400-2 (1863) ; Eaton, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1871, p. 62, pis. 17-17 a (1871); Joly, Mem. Soc. d. Sc. Nat. Cherbourg, xvi. pi. i. 2 [after Swammerd.] (1872) ; Hag., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1873, pp. 385-86 and 392 (1873) ; N. & E. Joly, Rev. Sc. Nat. v. 10, and pp. 324-26, pis. vi. 2, ix. 39-41 (1876) ; Mocsary [vide Ephemerum, Swam. &c. supra] (1878) ; Rostock, Jahresb. d. Ver. f. Naturk. Zwickau, 1877, p. 82 (1878). Adult {dried) 6 . — Wings dull translucent brownish, of a tint intermediate between medium sepia and medium Cologne-earth, with opaque ncuration and slightly yellowish wing-roots. The first of the subsidiary nervurcs contained within the fork of the anal nervure (8) is rather unstable in its arrangement. Setae, venter, legs, and underside of the thorax light bright yellow, excepting the tibice and tarsi, which are very light brownish ; the pronotum dull light waxy-yellow, the mesonotum slightly browner. Head pitch- black. Dorsum of abdomen intense sepia. S . Wings very slightly lighter than in the 6 . Pronotum, meso- and metanotum of a medium Cologne-earth brown, which colour borders the occipital margin of the vertex. Seta? light brownish yellow. Length of body, d 23-25, $ 27*5-29; wing, 6 24-26, $ 31 ; setaj, 6 70-74 & 1-5, 2 26-27-5 mm. Mab. The large rivers of middle Europe from Rotterdam to Hungary, also near Cette. This last locality is quoted on account of a nyiuph in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, Mass. According to Mr. Snellen of Rotterdam, Swammerdam's statement that this species appears in vast multitudes during one or two evenings only every year, " on or about the Peast of St. John," is generally correct, but the date of the swarm is liable to be earlier in warm seasons, sometimes as early as the 10th of June. EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHE]\rEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. 25 Palingbnia ftjliginosa, Georgi. Ephemera fuliginos a, Georgi, Geogr.-physik. u. naturhist. Beschr. d. russischen Reichsj Th. iii. vi. p. 324 (1802). Palingenia fuliginosa, ! Hag., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1873), p. 392. Adult {(hied) 6 . — Wiugs deep raw-umber brown, translucent, dull. Compared witli P. lonrticanda, the sinuous first axillary nervure (9') of the fore wing is more strongly arched towards the inner margin ; and the first of the subsidiary nervures enclosed by the fork of the anal nervure (8), instead of being diffuse, imitates on a small scale with its branches the same main nervure and its branches in an appreciable manner. Pro- thorax above somewhat pale ochreous, the remainder of the thorax chiefly brown-ochre. Ab iomen above rather darker than the wings ; the pleura and venter, forceps and sette, pale yellow-ochre. Sides and underside of thorax and the femora slightly deeper in tint than the venter, the tibire and tarsi tinged with ashy-grey ; vertex of head brown-ochre, with the orbits of the ocelli blackened. Approximote admeasurements : — length of body 25, wing 25, setae upwards of 55 mm. Hah. The Caucasus. Subgenus Anagenesia. Adult. — Prsebrachial nervure (6) of the fore wing forked before the middle ; three conspicuous sets of longitudinal nervures proceed in pairs to the terminal margin (at i', 5 & 6, and 6^). Pore tarsus of d shorter than the femur. Setae 2, in 6 upwards of three times as long as the body, in ? about half as long as it. Nym])h. — Divisions of the abdominal tracheal branchite, of uniform shape, unequal; each division is a narrow membranous lamina folded length-wise, fringed with short simple fibrils, to which are distributed colourless air-vessels from a dark median trunk. In a nymph from Ceylon the clypeus has a globular tubercle in the middle of its front edge ; there is a triangular tubercle above the insertion of the antenna, and one in a line with the eye on each side of the jirothorax. The bearding of the fore femur is restricted to a rounded patch at the base beneath, and is almost erect ; that of the tibia is spreading, and clothes the sides and the front, and in the latter position a scanty series of long tactile hairs stands erect. In the hinder legs the femoral patches are insignificant, the tibia and tarsus are ciliated outside, and the tibia is shortly and densely pilose on its distal border, and towards its extremity beneath. Antennae setaceous, shorter than the head; the first three joints longer than any of the othei-s, which are almost nude ; the second joint furnished with a dense patch of hair outside. Labrum small. Mandibles short and stout, distally pilose, and with a curved patch of long spreading hair near the base on the outside ; the crown, somewhat wedge-shaped and irregularly dentate, is remote from the molar protuberance. Lacinia of the upper maxilla flattened and ol)liquely truncate, pungent, and crowned with a dense beard, also bearded within below the point, the last line of hair shortly and obliquely decurrent upon the outside; first joint of the palpus nude; second joint much the longer, slightly incurved towards its acute extremity, and densely pilose nearly all over. Labium and SECOND SEKIBS. — ZOOLOGY, VOL. III. 4 26 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID.5: OE MATELIES. lower maxillse as in the typical form. Lingua acutely ovate ; the paraglossae rather narrow, connivent. Setae about J as long as the body. DistribiUion. Indo-Malay region and Irkutzk. Ti/pe. F. lata, "Walker. Etymology . dvayeveala, regeneration. Palingenia sibirica, jVPLach. Palingenia sibirica, \ M'^Lacb., Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. xv. 50, jil. i. 1-lffl (1872). Adult 6 {dried). — Pore wings pale yellowish-brown, darkening gradually towards the tip ; neuration for the most part pale, but some of the veinlets in the marginal and sub- marginal areas are blackish. Hinder tarsi with one claw each ; legs whitish. Head pale yellowish ; a black spot at the base of each antenna, a subtriangular blackish spot contiguous with the oculus on each side of the vertex, the sutures of the cranium blackish, and two brownish occipital clouds. Notum blackish ; the borders and median stripe of the prouotum pale. Abdomen above blackish ; the segments pale at the sides, and very narrowly so at the tips ; venter pale. Setae pale, with fine sliort pubescence. Length of body 21 mm. Hab. Irkutzk, 20th of May (M'Lach. Mus.). There is a specimen in Baron de Selys- Longchamps's collection. Palingenia lata, Walk. Plate I. 1 6 (wing). Palingenia lata, ! Walk., List Neiiropt. Brit. Mus. iii. 550 (1853) ; Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. (1871), p. 63, pi. iii. 18-18 6 (1871). P. amjAa, M<-Lach., Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. xv. 50 (1873) [nominal reference — part] . Adult {dried) 6 . — Wings and thorax light Vandyke-brown ; the longitudinal neuration of the former, the cross veinlets in the basal half of the disk of the fore wing, and also those contained within the narrow interspaces of the nervures, distributed in pairs to the terminal margin, opaque and dark Vandyke-brown; the fork of the anal nervure (8) encloses a single longitudinal nervure. Femora nearly concolorous with the wings ; the fore femur dark above, the hinder tibiae and tarsi greyer, and transversely rugose. In dried examples the ungues of the hinder tarsi appear to be single. Abdomen faded, fuscous above. Setae very light dull brownish yellow, pilose with uniform hair. Length of body, d , 22, wing 23, setae about 70 mm. Eah. Silhet. Palingenia ampla, sp. nov, Plate I. Ic (wing). Adult {dried) 6 . — Wings (as opaque objects) uniformly deep warm sepia-grey, modified in transmitted light with light sepia-brown, their neui-ation for the most part opaque; in the fore wing, the fork of the anal nervure (8) encloses a single longitudinal nervure. Venter very light bistre-grey modified with equally light Vandyke-grey; hinder femora nearly of the same colour beneath as the venter, but Vandyke-brown above ; fore femora faded ; all the tibiae and tarsi (probably faded) extremely light Vandyke-grey, transversely rugose; the hinder ungues darker and single. Setae light EEV. A. E. EATON OX EECEXT EPHEMERLD.E OR MATELIES. 27 warm sepia-brown, with opaque joiiiing-s, and pubescent, with a few hairs at the joinings longer than the others. Length of body, 2 , 17, wing 18 mm. JSuh. Sarawak. Palixgenia javaxica, sp. nov. Plates I. & II. 1 d (forceps, 6 , legs, fore wing, and parts of setse). Adult (dried) d . — Wings dark subtestaceo-cervinous, with opaque neuration ; the veinlets along the terminal margin of the fore wing less sparse and better defined than in the wing of P. tenera. Body faded above ; venter and setse subtestaceous, the genitalia luteo-testaceous ; the setoe for some distance in the middle portion of their length are furnished at the joinings with a few spreading hairs, longer and stronger than the hairs of the universal pubescence. The fore legs and the hinder tibire and tarsi opaque whitish ; hinder femora testaceo-lutescent ; fore tibia on the inner side at the tip armed with a small more or less acute tubercle ; intermediate legs the shortest pair, hind legs the longest, and more than half as long as the abdomen ; luigues of the hinder tarsi very unequal, the lesser hardly visible ; those of the fore tarsus more nearly alike, and well developed. The last two joints of each forceps-limb are together very nearly half as long as the antepenultimate joint. Length of body, 6 , 19, wing 22-23"5, setoe about 60-70 mm. Sab. Orawang (Java occid.). Five examjjles in Leyden Mus. communicated to me in 1876 by Mhr. C. Eitsema. The MS. name by Van A'oUenhoven attached to one of them (No. 50), being preoccupied in Ephemeridas, is not adopted. Palixgenia texera, sp. nov. Plate II. 1 e (wing and part of setae). Adult {dried) 6 . — TMngs dark cinereous, with the longitudinal nervures and the coarser of the cross veinlets subpiceous or fuscous, and with the finer of these whitish or edged with whitish when viewed obliquely so as to reflect light. Body discoloured, genitalia pale testaceous, setae almost concolorous with the wings. Legs very short in comparison with those of P. y««;a?i/(?«, the posterior femur not extending to beyond the second abdominal segment ; fore legs faded (whitish ?), posterior femur subochraceous. Pubescence of setaj composed of uniform hairs. Length of body 17, setai circ. 55 mm. Sab. Ardjoeno (Java orient.). One example in the Leyden Museum. A smaller insect than P. javanica, having wings free from the least tint of testaceous, and with more delicate neuration. Palixgexia papijaxa, Etn. Plate II. \f (wing and forceps, 6 adult). Palingenia papuana,\ Etn., Annal. Mus. Civ. di Stor. Nat. di Geneva, xiv. 398, woodcut a-f (1879). Adult {dried and in spirits). — Wings in the 6 white with light yellowish nem-ation, the membrane during life somewhat creamy-white : in the 2 the wings are spotted with black. The fork of the anal nervure of the fore wing contains a single longitudinal nervure. Sette pubescent with uniform hair. Fore femur in the 6 not much shorter than the fore tibia ; intermediate tarsus about as long as the intermediate tibia ; hinder 4* 28 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMEEID^ OR MAYFLIES. tarsi biunguiculate, the ungues very vinequal (/. c. woodcut h, c). Forceps sliort and stout, their last two joints very short. Length of body, d 36, ? (after oviposition) 32 ; wing, c? and ? , 27 ; seta?, 6 50, ? 17 mm. Hab. Near tlie island of EUangowan, in December 1875, in insignificant numbers ; and on Fly river, New Guinea, on the 2nd of July, 1876, in extreme profusion (Signor L. M. d'Albertis). Specimens in fluid are in Mus. Civ. di Stor. Nat. di Genova, and in M'Lach. Mus., and some remnants of a pinned 6 example in Brit. Mus. The ' Annali ' above cited, after my diagnosis of the species, quote a passage from Signor d'Albertis's travels relating to this insect, whose purport may be thus freely summarized. On the 2nd of July, 1876, a few hours before sunset, wo witnessed a strange and magni- ficent sight produced by an abundance of a species of Mayfly, actively pursued by the following birds: — Calornis metalUca, Artamus cucopifgkdis, a Graculus, a Eurystomtis, and the commonest Whiteheaded Osprey, HaUastur (jirrenera. Simultaneously the insects were being preyed upon by thousands of fishes, who rushed up to seize them whenever they touched the water with their delicate wiugs. But so profuse was the abundance of the flies, that the ravages of all their destroyers caused no appreciable diminution in their numbers. Mile after mile, from bank to bank, the river seemed covered with them, when all at once, as if by signal, the whole of them rose up confusedly, flying aloft in a thousand different directions, producing an eff'ect in the air like that of a heavy fall of snow ; then they descended again, and the snow seemed to cover the river with a white layer. The males very largely outnumbered the females. Subgenus ? Palingenia atrostoma, Weber. Ephemera atrostoma, Weber, Obs. Ent. 99 (1801). Palingenia atrostoma, Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevroiit. ii. Epliem. 1.^)7 (1843-5) ; Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 550 (1853). 1 He.ru genia atrostoma, Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), G5. Wings fuscous. Body yellow; mouth black; dorsum of abdomen fuscous ; setce fuscous. Hah. Brazil. In 1871 I ranked this species conjecturally with Hexagenia. At that time the genus Palingenia was not positively known to be represented in America ; but now that a species of this group (represented by the nymph in the Museum of Com- parative Zoology, Cambridge (Mass.), figured in PL XXV. of the present work) has been ascertained to occur in the Amazons, Weber's description of the species atrostoma as " Gigas in hoc geuere ; thorax marginatus canaliculatusque ; cauda biscta, setis longissimis," taken in connexion with the (iolours of the wings and body, lends proba- bility to the supposition of its being a Palingenia. Pictet was disposed to refer it to what is now known as Gampsurus. The furrows of the thorax are adverse to its being considered to be a Euthi/plocia. Subsection B of Section 1. — Wing-neuration scanty ; anal nervure (8) of the fore wing curved ; axillary nervures either rudimentary or obsolete, or represented by a branch of the anal nervure (8) that meets the terminal margin ; wing-membrane transparent ; REV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEIDiE Oil MAYFLIES. 29 recurrent membi^ane at the fore-wing roots often prolonged into a narrow free-pointed appendage beyond the peak of the naesonotum ; hind wing traversed lengthwise by a con- tracted fold. Pronotuni compact, transverse, arched behind. Setce in $ short, smooth, and usually glabrous ; in d very long, and more or less pilose. Forceps — limbs inserted upon the sides of a laminar lobe extending from the distal ventral margin of the 9th segment, which lobe is probably not deflexible, but is sometimes represented in the $ ; their proximal joints the longest. Penis exposed, the lobes unarmed (excepting perhaps in Lachlania) ; but stimuli capable of extrusion are in some genera concealed in the 9th segment. Proportions of eyes and ocelli vary with the genus. Fore legs of 6 short and slender ; the tibia and tarsus often transversely rugose, the femur nearly as long as the tibia, the ungues usually alike, the tarsus shorter than the femur; hind legs usually the longest pair, the ungues subequal, broad, sometimes dissimilar, commonly flaccid. Nymi)h {OUgoneurla oulj). — Labium flat; abdominal tracheal branchia3 inserted in the axils of notches in the posterior margins of the segments close to the lateral angles, which angles are prolonged backwards. Pore legs strong, the femur and tibia densely bearded beneath or behind with long hair, the tibia and tarsus slender in comparison with the femur. The terminal margins of the fore wings are united by membrane forming a hood. [I believe these characteristics are common to all the nymphs of this alliance, judging from the structure of the adult flies.] {a.) Wing-membrane dull or satin-like ; fore wing with the anal nervure (8) forked, and \\ith a free epinotal appendage ; 3 caudal setae. OLIGONEURIA, Pict. 1815. Illustrations. Adult (details) PL III. 2 a-6 ; (whole figures,) see citations of Costa, Pictet, and Hagen (1855), under O. rhenana and O. anomala. Nymph, PL XXVI. ; see also citations of Joly and Vayssiere (O. garumnlca), under O. rhenana. Adult. — Pore wing with 5 longitudinal nervures, beside the costa and subcosta (this last concealed), and with several series of cross veiulets in the fore part of the wing. Setae subequal in length to one another ; in 6 about 1^ as long as the body, and pilose at the joinings ; in $ at most §, and at least \, as long as it. Eyes in s somewhat reniform, and approximated to each other above ; in $ oval and remote ; anterior ocellus not much smaller than the others. Spinose prolongations of the posterior lateral angles of the abdominal segments slender, those of the 8th and 9th segments the strongest. Thoracic spiracles open in the dried insect ; aperture of the anterior trian- gular, that of the posterior ovate, narrowed below. Ni/mjjh [O. rlienana). — Six dorsal pairs of tracheal branchiiE, borne upon segments 2-7, and a ventral pair on segment 1, all alike composed of a small, thick, coriaceous, subrotuud lamina, with a tuft of fibrils at its point of attachment. Divisions of the labium intimately colierent : 1st maxilke furnished with a tuft of fibrillose tracheal branchia; at the ouler base of the palpus. — In the nymph of O. rhenana, the bearding of the fore leg is restricted to well-defined patches on the inner (or hinder) side of the tibia and femur, the rest of the legs being almost quite glabrous ; the intermediate 30 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID^ OE MAYFLIES. tarsus is minutely spinulose beneath ; the hind tibia is similarly spinulose behind dis- tally ; the tibia and tarsi are all slender, and the femora distally somewhat enlarged ; the tracheal laminae are spinulose also. Head semielliptical, arched above from side to side, and shelving from behind, so as to be wedge-like in vertical section, the underside being flattened. Antennae glabrous, setaceous, the first two joints the largest. Labrum sbghtly retuse in front, and diffusely pilose along its anterior border. Mandibles distally enlarged, the molar tuberosity continuous with the crown, compact, and relatively large ; the three fangs slender and small, the innermost appendiculated. Lacinia of 1st maxillaj small, ovate lanceolate, pungent, densely bearded inside, pubescent outside ; the palpus very large and stout, the first joint minute, pubescent outside ; the second joint rela- tively enormous, finger-like, curved, tapering distally, within and without at the tip densely hairy above, more sparsely pubescent beneath ; the stipes closely associated with the fan-like branchial tuft of fibrils, which passes backwards above and beyond the hinder border of the labium, and underlies the prosternuni. Lacinige of the 2nd maxillae (if developed at all) adherent to the labium in the form of two elevated folds of mem- brane ; palpus strong and finger-like, the first joint short, pilose ; second joint pubescent, long, and stout. Lingua somewhat broadly cordate ; the paraglosste well developed and somewhat rounded. Outer seta? less than half as long as the body. Distribution. Europe, middle and south, and Brazil. Ti/pe. 0. anomala, Pict. Mijmology . oXlyoc and vevglov, from the paucity of cross veinlets in the wings. The following differences between the adult European and Brazilian species may here be noted, because they may be accompanied by unconformity in the nymphs, and be of more than specific value. O. anomala, ? , has the setae equal to each other in length, and sparingly pilose. The d has the fore tibia relatively shorter in proportion to the femur than 0. rhenana, and the proximal joint in all the tarsi longer than the second joint. In O. rhenana, ? , the intermediate seta is slightly shorter than the outer setae, and all are glabrous. The 6 fore tibia is about 1-| (instead of only 1^) as long as the femur, and the proximal joint in all the tarsi is shorter than the second joint. Oligoneubia anomala, Pict. Plate III. 2 i ( d , wings, legs, and forceps, $ , legs). Oligoneuria [type] anomala, Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevropt. ii. Epli^m. 290, pi. xlvii. (1843-5) ; Walk., List Neuropt. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 585 (1853) ; Hag., Stct. ent. Zeit. xvi. 269, pi. i. (1855) ; Etn., Ent. Mo. Mag. V. 83 (1868); id., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 55. Adult {dried) rounded, pilose. Fore leg short and strong, bearded and minutely tuberculated beneath the femur at the base, and at the back of the tibia; tlie tibia with a strongly circumscribed line of oblique spreading beard near its base outside, two rows of tubercles behind, and a single series of erect tactile hairs in front. Hinder legs slightly pubescent, but shortly pilose at the upper extremity of the femur, in front of the tibia, and on the dorsum of the tarsus. The nymph sometimes divaricates the outer setae, and then their tips are bent so as to point behind. When the subimago alights to moult, the slough is cast off completely in about | of a minute, the insect standing upon its four hinder legs, holding its fore legs apart off the ground, and its setjB a little apart from one another. Distribution. Middle continental Europe southwards to N. Africa; In do-Malay Eegion ; S. Africa ; N. America, from Canada (Niagara) to New Orleans. Type. P. virgo (in EpI/emera), 01. Etymolor/y. ttoXv^htoc and apKvc, from the closeness of the reticulation of the wings. PoLYMiTARCTS VIRGO, 01. Plate VI. 10 a ( c? , head, legs, forceps, wings adult ; fore leg subim.). Hemerobius, Epheinerum, S^c; Glut., Opusc. ii. title-page (woodcut) and pp. 61, 87, 90 (1634) ; Mey., in Godart's Metamorph. et Hist. Nat. lus. i. Append, pp. 193-200 (1G62) ; Blegny, Temple d'Esculape, An. 2", p. 188 (1680) ; Targ.-Tozz., Let. sopr. una numcros. sp. dei Farfalle vedut. in Firenze -sulla metil di Luglio, pp. 32, froutisp. figs. 1-5 (1711) ; Reaum., Mem. pour scrv. h Thist. dcs Ins. vi. 457-522, pis. xlii.-xliv. (1742) ; Sclijef., 'Das fliegende Uferaas oder der Haft,' &c., p. 34 (1757) ; idem, reprinted in Abhandl. von Ins. iii. 30, pi. i. (1779) ; idem, Ic. Ins. Ratisb. ii. pi. clxxv. 1-3 (1776). EpJiemera virgo, 01., Enc. Meth. vi. 419 (1791) ; Lat., II. N. xiii. 98 (1805) ; idem, Nouv. Diet. H. N. X. pi. xix. 5 (1847).— ?£. marocana, Fab., Ent. Syst. emend, iii. pars i. 69 (1793). — +£. lutea, Seetzen, in Meyer's Magaz. f. d. Thiergeseh. i. 41-3 (1794) ; Pz. in Exijlic. Scliref. Ic. clxxv. (1804).— J^;. albi- pennis, Voigt, Lelirbuch d. Zool. v. 309-11 (1840); Blanch., II. N. Ins. iii. 54, pi. iii. 1 (1840) ; Ramb., N(5vrop. 296 (1842). Palingenia Xlioraria, Burm., Handb. Bd. ii. Abth. ii. 802 (1839) ; idem, in D' Alton. Zeit. f. Zool. &c. i. xiv. pp. 109-12, t. i. 1-12 (1848) ; Hag., Stet. ent. Zeit. xxvi. 229 (1865); Leunis, Synop. d. Natur- gesch. d. Thierreicbs &c. ed. ii. p. 635 (1860) ; Loew, Verb, zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, xvi. 947 (1866).— P. Virgo, Pict., Nat. Hist. Nevropt. ii. Epbem. 141, pi. ix.-xi. 3 (1843-5); A. & G. B. Villa, in Eeono- mista,p. 1-6, illustrat. (1847, November) ; Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 547 (1853) ; Letzner, in Arbeit, sehles. Gesellsch. p. 101 (1854) ; Brau., Neuropt. Aust. 25 (1857) ; Karsch, Die Insectenwelt, v. 100-1 (1863) ; Oulian., Neuropt. &c. of Moscow, p. 26 (1867) ; Ausserer, Annuar. d. Soc. Natur. Modena, An. iv. 132 (1869) ; N. Joly, Me'm. Acad. Sc. Inscript. Belles-Let. Toulouse (7), iii. 379-386 [development] (1871, Sept.); ditto, Ann. Sc. Nat. (5), xv. Art. x. pgs. 5 (1871-2); ditto, Compt. Rend. Ixxxi. 809 (1875) ; ditto, Robin's Journ. Anat. and Physiol, xii. 486-95, pis. i.-ii. (1876, Sept.); ditto, Rev. Sc. Nat. Montpellier, v. 305-330 (1876, Dec.); ditto, Bull. Soc. d'Et. Sc. d'Augers, 1874-5, p. 40, note a (1876) ; idem, Compt. Rend. Ixxxiii. 809 (1877) ; ditto (translated), Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), xix. 193-5 (1877); idem, Mem. Acad. Sc. Inscript. & Belles-Let. Toulouse (separate), 10 pgs. pis. i.-ii. [development] (1878) ; idem. Bull. Soc. d'Et. Sc. d'Angers, 1878-9, p. 171 (1880). 46 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMEEID^ OR MAYFLIES. Polymitarcys [type] virgo, Etn., Ent. Mo. Mag. v. 84. (1868, Aug.) ; Traus. Ent. Soc. Lond. (1871), 60, pi. i. 5 & iii. 15-15 b [details] ; Palmeu, d. Morphol. d. Traclieensyst. sect. i. pp. 1-21, taf. i. 1-7 (1877) ; Mocsary [vide Ephtmerum under citations for Palingenia longicauda (1878)] ; Rostock, Jahresber. d. Vcr. f. Naturk. Zwickau, 1877, p. 81 (1878); Vayssiere, Ann. Sc. Nat. (6), Zool, xiii. 43, figs. 9-12, & 80-80 bis [nymph] (1882). Adult {in life), 6 . — Head whitisli, tinged with grey above, the oculi and bases of the ocelli black, tlie hinder ocelli met interiorly by a fine curved fuscous line. Pronotum whitish, clouded more or less with grey, and on its front edge in two places on each side tinged with sepia-grey. Meso- and metathorax pale brown-ochreous or lutescent, their peaks and the decurrent membranes of the wing-roots whitish. Abdomen whitish, the dorsum clouded more or less with grey, especially at the tips of the segments, the last two ventral segments and the peuis somewhat ochroleucoiis. Seta3 and forceps white, the former pellucid, with opaque joinings. Wings white, the costa, subcosta, and radius of the fore wings grey. Legs white, the fore legs with a longitu- dinal streak from the base outside the coxa, the femur (all but the back of the knee) and the tibia blackish. The body of the 2 is more completely pale brown-ochreous, before the eggs are discharged; afterwards the emptied abdomen is of a pale warm sepia-grey. Length of body, light brownish grey. Legs rather paler than in the imago. Imago {dried). — j . Body reddish pitch-brown ; thorax sometimes nearly pitch-black KEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMERID/E OR MAYFLIES. 99 above; abdominal joinings opaque. Setse rusty whitish or drab, with their bases rusty Forceps-limbs light rusty-brown. Inferior spurs of the penis-lobes obliquely deflected, broadly compressed and acuminate. Legs rufescent brown, changing to rufescent amber in transmitted liglit ; the fore tarsus, and the tibiae and tarsi of the hinder legs, rather lighter than tlie remainder. Wings vitreous, with the longitudinal neuration and the opaque cross-veinlets of the pterostigmatic space of the fore wing light rufo-piceous; these are somewhat irregular and variable, sometimes sparsely branched and anasto- mosing, and are about 12-lG in number. ? very similar to the d . Setaj whitish. Hind tibite and tarsi whitish, with the extreme base of the tibia, the ungues, terminal joint, and the distal borders of the other joints of tlie tarsus, rufescent brownisli. Wings nearly as in c? , but the nervures posterior to the cubitus of the fore wing arc practically colourless ; the marginal area contains about 10 weak cross veinlets between the great cross vein and the bulla, and 17-21 (mostly stronger) beyond that ; these are usually simple, and many of tliem tapering towards the costa arc slightly curved. Length of body 8, wing, 6 8-9, 2 7-9, setae, d 14 mm. Bab. Mount Ilood, Oregon (M'^Lach. Mus.). Leptophlebia rufivenosa, sp. nov. Siibhnago (dried), 2 ■ — Wings transparent, light yellowish brown-gi'ey ; their neuration in opaque view light ferruginous brown, changing in transmitted light to rufo-piceous. Setae (Vandyke) brownish grey. Imago (dried), ? .—Body brownish piceous, or dark rufo-piceous, with the joinings of the abdominal segments of empty specimens opaque. Setse somewhat lighter than in the subimago, with the joinings towards the roots, in large examples, opaqiie and narrowly rufo-piceous. Fore femur in opaque view intense (ferruginous) brown-ochre, the tibia and tarsus much lighter or somewhat testaceous ; the leg reflects a warm ferruginous tint ; in transmitted light the femur and tibia are of a ferruginous amber-colour, the trochanter and tarsus paler. Hinder legs rather lighter than the fore legs. Wings transparent, the membrane lightly and uniformly tinted, and the neuration strongly coloured with ferruginous ochre, the latter reflecting a reddish or golden brown and transmitting a rich amber-colour. The marginal area of the fore Aving contains 7-8 cross veinlets before the bulla, and 17-20 beyond it ; those in the pterostigmatic region are simple and slightly sinuous in small specimens, but in large examples are apt to be irregular in some degree, and to anastomose in parts with one another. Length of body, ? 6-8, wing 7-10, setse ira. 8-10 mm. Sab. Mount Hood ; Washington Territory (M'^Lach. Mus.) ; S. Raphael, Cal. (Osten- Sacken, in Mus. Comp. Zool. Cambridge, Mass.), March 7th. (?) Leptophlebia prj^pedita, sp. nov. Plate XI. 17 c (forceps and penis, in two positions). Subimago (dried). — Wings sepia-grey, with pitch-brown neuration. Setse sepia-brown. Imago (dried), d .—Thorax jet-black above ; alidomen pitch-brown, sometimes light 100 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMERID^ OE MAYFLIES, pitch-brown, with joinings 2-7 opaque ; venter probably lighter than the dorsum, and more of a warm sepia-brown. Setas warm sepia-brown. Legs pitch-brown, the fore tarsus and the hinder legs rather lighter than the fore femur. Wings vitreous, with a faint brownish grey tint; their neuration, in opaque view pitch-brown, transmits a brown amber-colour ; the marginal area of the fore wing contains 3-7 indistinct cross veinlets before the bulla, and 11-14, mostly well defined, beyond it, those in the pterostigmatic region are simple and usually slightly curved. The form of the genitalia is noteworthy. Length of body 5, wing 5-6 mm. Hab. Dedham, Mass. (M'^Lach. Mus.). The apparent presence of a short joint next to the basis in the forceps-limbs is the sole cause of my hesitation in ranking this species in Leptophlebia. I have seen specimens of several other North- American species of Leptophlehia, but not sufficient for their description. BLASTURUS, Etn. 1881. Illustrations. Adult (details) PL XL 18. Ni/mph PI. XXXIIL, see also {?)B. ves- pertinus, L., below. Adult. — Similar to Lep)topldebia in the form and neuration of the wings, the structure of the mesothoracic spiracle, the 3 genitalia (in the known species conformable to those of L. niarginata), the ventral lobe of the 9th $ abdominal segment, the legs, and the ungues of the tarsi ; differing from that genus in the proportional lengths of the caudal setie, which vary with the species. Median seta considerably shorter than the others ; outer seta; in d 2-3 times as long as the body, median from f-1 the length of the body ; outer setse in $ l^-lf, median \—^ as long as the body. Nymj)h (judging from its structure) latent ; abdominal tracheal branchiae diversiform, foliaceous and fringeless ; those of segment 1 bifid, with minutely hairy linear-lanceo- late divisions ; those of the other 6 pairs reclinate upon the sides of the dorsum, and formed of jugate, obliquely subovate, tail-pointed lamellae, whose cusps are minutely hairy at the edges, and are traversed longitudinally by the main tracheai of the lamellae. The following slight diff'erences are noticeable in the outlines of these lamellae : — in those of segments 2-6 the outer division of the twin lamella, at the base of the cusp, is incised on one side and has a sinus on the other side, while the inner division is incised on both sides of the cusp ; but in those of segment 7 are no incisions. Caudal setae defective in the specimens examined. Fangs of the mandibles in a large measure similar to those of Leptophlehia', the endopodite slender, somewhat abrupt, and furnished with a slender brush of hair. Palpus of maxilla i. slender ; tlie last 2 joints together constitute little more than half of the whole. Lacinia of maxilla ii. broad, nearly in the form of the quadrant of a circle. Tongue rotundly subquadrate ; paraglossse broadly rounded. Abdomen slightly dilated in the middle ; hinder lateral angles of segments 8 and 9 shortly and acutely produced. Hind leg a little the longest ; the tarsus (excluding the claw) ^ as long as the tibia. Type. B. cupidus (in Ephemera), Say. Distribution. Temperate N. America, and perhaps Scandinavia. REV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID^ OR MAYFLIES. 101 Etymology. jSAatrTovw and ov^a, from the median caudal seta resembling one that is sprouting forth and not fally developed. The wings of Blasturus figured in PI. XI. belonged to a large specimen ; in those of smaller examples the branchlets of the nervures along the terminal margin are less intricate, as a rule, and similar to those shown in the illustration of Leptophlehia. The nymphs were communicated to me by Dr. Ilagen, and were identified generically mainly by the wing-neuration and stature of specimens of mature growth, taken into consideration with their native localities. No aid towards the discrimination of the species described is afforded by the shape of the penis in the dried insects. Blasttjrus ctjpidus. Say. Plate XI. 18 (adult wings and legs), XXXIII. (nymph?). Ephemera cupida. Say, West. Quart. Rep. ii. 163 (1823) ; Lc Contc, Complete Writings of T. Say, i. 173 (1859).— i;. Hebes, Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. .538 (1853)?. PaUngenia pallipes ! & concinna, ! Walk., op. cH. 553 (1853). Potamanthus cupidus & concinnus, Hag., Smithson. Miscell. Coll. (18G1), Synop. Neuropt. N. Am. 51; (cupidus), Walsh, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. (1862), 372; Hag., Proc.Ent. See. Philad. ii. 172 (1863). XBa'etis ignava ! Hag., Smithson, &c. 47 (1861). Leptophlebia cupida (part), ! Etn., Ti-ans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 89, pis. ii. 26 & iv. 29-29 scms, Pict., Hist. &c. 235 (1843-5) ; Walk., List &c. 543 (1853) ; Hag., Ent. Ann. (1863), 19.— P. minor, Pict., Hist. &c. 237 (1843-5) ; Walk., List &e. 546 (1853). CM cingulata, Pict., Hist. &c. 271 (1843-5). Cloeon cingidata, Walk., List &c. 578 (1853). Leptophh'bia fusca, ! Etn., Ent. Mo. Mag. v. 87 (1868); id., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 90, pis. ii. 2 c, V. 2-2 6 [details] ; Meyer-Diir, Bull. Soc. Ent. Suisse, iv. 318 (1874) ; ! Vayssiere, Ann. des Sc. Nat. (6), Zool. xiii., pi. i. 1, 2 (1882). Habrophlebia [type] /wsca, ! Etn., Ent. Mo. Mag. xvii. 196 (1881) [citation]. Subimago {living). — Wings light blackish grey, the nervures, at first opaque whitish, becoming tinged with pitch-brown. Thorax pitch-brown, with pale sutures. Fore femur dull pitch-brown or pitch-black ; tibia and tarsus in opaque view blackish grey, changing in some lights to warm sepia-grey. Hinder femora dull light greenish Vandyke- grey or greenish sepia-grey, tibise light sepia-grey, tarsi light blackish grey. Setge light warm sepia-gi'ey, the joinings slightly opaque. Upper portion of eyes dull reddish- brown, polished ; lower part intense sepia-black. Imago [living). — 6 . Upper portion of oculi intense burnt-umber brown, the lower blackish. Thorax jet-black or pitch-black above, with light reddish-brown tegulse. Abdomen pitch-brown, growing darker with age; segments 2-7 translucent, excepting at the joinings, and narrowly whitish at the base ; the remaining segments opaque, the extreme distal edges of 7-9 often orange or light yellow above ; venter dark sepia-grey or blackish grey, often modified to some extent in segments 8 and 9 with dull orange. Seta3 light sepia-grey, Avith light brownish joinings. Last two joints of the forceps-limbs liwht sepia-grey ; penis during life somewhat Y-shaj)ed, with slender recumbent spurs beneath the lobes. Fore femur and both ends of the tibia pitch-black, the intermediate EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMERID.E OR MAYFLIES. Il7 portion of the latter pitch-brown, the tarsus lighter, varying with change of posture to brownish-hlack-grey : [iohe7i dried, in oblique view the tibia reflects a liglit madder-brown, or (in specimens from Biron) a liglit Venetian-red, and the tarsus is light testaceous ; in transmitted liglit the former becomes translucent rufo-piceous or amber-brown, and the tarsus yellowish amber.] Hinder legs {dried) translucent amber-brown in transmitted light, changing in opaque view to a nearly uniform light pitch-brown, and in oblique view to a liglit translucent bronze or bistre-brown, the tarsi in certain positions appearing light greyish, with opaque edges to the intermediate joints, but usually concolorous with the tibife. Wings vitreous ; the longitudinal nervui'cs and the cross veinlets of the pterostigmatic region of the fore wing in opaque view pitch-brown, in oblique view light brownish ; in transmitted light the stronger nervures become yellowish amber, and the finer whitish. The marginal area of the fore wing contains about 4 obsolescent cross veinlets before the bulla, and beyond that 11 ; of these, 4-8 in the pterostigmatic region are well defined, simple, and slightly curved; the remaining cross veinlets of the wing are more delicate, and are deficient in colouring, excepting sometimes those in the distal half of the submargiual area. $ similar generally to d" , with the fore tarsus lighter, and the setre with darker joinings. In the fore wing the neuration, on the whole, in a slight but appreciable degree is better defined than in the d , and the cross veinlets in the outer half of the wing situated between the radius (3) and the proebrachial (6) nervures exhibit the same colours as those in the pterostigmatic region. Length of body 5-7; wing G-7 ; setae, d im. 8 & 12-11 & 12, ? 6 e% 8-8 & 9, subim. 5-5 & 7 millim. JIab. Generally common in Western Europe during the summer months, frequenting brooks and rivcr^s of moderate temperature, and ranging from Great Britain and the Vosges (jM'Lach.) southwards to the lowlands of Switzerland and southern Prance. Specimens from this last district (where I have met with it in the neighbourhood of Toulouse and abundantly at Biron near Orthez) have the wings of the subimago more of a sepia-grey than a black-grey, and the legs of the d imago rather brighter in tint than those of normal examples; the thorax also of a 2 im. from Toulouse, in my collection, is pitch-brown instead of pitch-black ; but this 2 may have been prematurely killed, and the difFerences in colouring of the 6 im. and the subim., mentioned, are not sufficiently marked to be accounted specific. Habkophlebia nervulosa, sp. nov. Subimago (r/r/Vf/).— Wings sepia-grey, with pitch-brown neuration. Setae warm sepia- grey, with opaque joinings. Imago {living and f/r/^f/).— Difficult to distinguish from R. fitsca without actual com- parison of specimens; chiefly characterized by the cross veinlets of the wings being usually more strongly defined than in that species, and by the hinder femora lieing dark at the tip in opaque view. — s . Upper portion of eyes castaneo-piceous, the lower sub- piceous. Thorax jet-black above, sometimes dark piceous when dried. Abdomen dark piceous above, with the apical margins of the segments narrowly yellowish, and with the bases of segments 4-7 in some examples partially translucent ; venter slightly paler and SECOND SEMES. — ZOOLOGY, VOL. III. 16 118 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID^ OE MAYFLIES. duller. Setce either piceous, or with their bases piceous and their remainder whitish warm sepia, with the joinings alternately broadly and narrowly piceous. Forceps piceous at the base, with their last two joints smoky grey. Eore legs {during life) pitch-l^lack, with brownish-black tarsi, these changing in some lights to smoky grey ; hinder legs 2iiceous, with the tips of the femora dark, the tarsi blackish grey, and the tibiae in some lights smoky grey, excepting towards both of their extremities. When dried, the fore legs become dark piceous in opaque view, changing in oblique view to intense pitch- brown, with the tarsus lighter brownish or almost light burnt-umber brown ; and viewed with light transmitted the femur is dark piceous amber, the tibia less opaque, and the tarsus testaceous amber. The hinder legs, lohen dried, are raw-umber brown, with the tips of the femora dark, changing in transmitted light to translucent yellowish amber, with the tips opaque. Wings vitreous, with pitch-brown neuration ; cross veinlets generally well defined, excepting in the marginal area of the fore wing before the pterostigmatic region, in the submarginal area before the bulla, and in the adjacent portion of the followdng area ; but some of the lowland specimens have those in the remaining portions of the fore wing scarcely stronger than the weaker cross veinlets of the average Avius?. The mar2:inal area of the fore wing contains about 4-6 ill-defined or obsolescent cross veinlets before the bulla, 3-4 beyond it, also obsolescent between that and the pterostigmatic space, while this contains 7-12 well-defined simple straight or slightly curved cross veinlets. $ {dried). — Thorax pitch-brown above. Wings transparent, with a slight brownish- grey tint, and with the neuration more strongly defined than in the 6 . In one of the specimens all of the cross veinlets of the fore wing are very distinct ; in other specimens tliose corresponding in position with such as are obsolescent in the 6 are weaker than Ihe remainder: the marginal area contains about 5-6 before the bulla, and 14-17 beyond it, which are nearly all simple. Length of body 7-8 ; Aving 7-9 ; setae, d ini. 8 & 8"5- 9-5 & 10-5, 2 8 & 9-5 millim. Hub. Common in Algarve and Portugal, in May and June ; ranging from altitudes of 200-400 ft. near Silves, up to 2000-2850 ft. on Eoia in the former, and in the latter from 380-1280 ft. at Cintra and 640 ft. at Ponte de Morcellos, up to 1800 ft. in the Estrella, and 1600-2500 ft. near Villa Real in Traz-os-Moutes. Habrophlebia modesta, Hagen. Plate XIII. 22 b (penis, two views). Potamanthus modestus, ! Hag., Anu. Soc. Eut. Fr. scr. 4, iv. 31) (1864). Leptophlubia modesta, ! Etn., Traus. Ent. Soc. Loiulou (1871), 91, pi. v. 3-3 i [details]. Subimago {dried). — Eore wings sepia-grey, lighter than those of S. nervulosa, with opaque neuration ; hind wings dull pale yellowish grey. Setse light warm sepia-brown, with opaque joinings. Imago {dried), 0, 31, & 33, Ni/mph, PL XXXVII. ; also Pictet, op. cit. pis. 29 & 33, and Vayssiere, Ann. des Sc. Nat. (6) xiii. pLviii. 74 &c. (1882). Adult. — Hind wing of moderate size, unevenly arcuate in front, with a very shallow marginal depression just heyond the most salient portion of the costa; the subcosta (2) advancing from the wing-roots in a bold curve towards that prominence, proceeds, in proximity to the costa from thereabouts, almost in a direct course towards the obtuse extremity of the wing, and meets the margin obliquely rather near the termination of the radius (3) ; this last nervure, more gently curved, approaches the subcosta gradually, and attains the tip of the wing : the intercalar neuration is well developed, and cross veinlets are numerous. In both wings most of the intercalary veinlets remain isolated and rudimental, comparatively few of them obtaining connection with longitudinal nervures. Cross veinlets plentiful in the larger portion of the fore wing, but scarce or absent in the immediate vicinage of the terminal margin and within tlie area bounded anteriorly by the anal (8) nervure, and absent from the marginal area before the buUa ; those of the pterostigmatic space, in all the described species, are for the most part divided near the costa, and their branchlets intercommunicate so as to enclose a series of small irregular cellules upon the costa. In the anal-axillar interspace of the same wing are 3 long intercalar nervures, and as few or fewer short isolated rudiments of others, one of the latter usually standing in the interval between the first and the second of the former. Of the three longer intercalars quoted, the intermediate is the longest ; and this is connected Avith the anal jiervure either directly (turning aside a little, anteriorly, to unite with it as a branch) or indirectly (by blending with a cross veinlet), and sometimes, in addition to that terminal connection, a cross veinlet establishes further communication between them. In like manner the first of the three may be connected directly or indirectly with the anal nervure, and the third with the second intercalar ; otherwise the first rcmnins isolated, and the third is simul- taneously in communication both with the first axillar (9') and with the intermediate intercalar nervures by uniting at its inward extremity with cross veinlets [compare Etn., op. supra cit. pi. ii. 5. Pictet's figui'e, Pict. op. ibidem cit. pi. xxxii. 1, is untrustworthy in detail]. Guard at the aperture of the mesothoracic spiracle small and triangular; Eorceps-limbs of 6 3-jointedj stout, the intermediate joint long, the others ver^ short. EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMERID.E OR MAYELIE.S. 125 Abdomen of ordinary proportions ; segments 2-7 of nearly nniform length, shorter than segment 8 (which is the longest) or 9 ; segment 10 short ; tlie postero-lateral angles of the dorsum in segments 8 and 9 are acute and slightly prolonged ; forceps-basis entire, the homologous lamina of the $ obtuse. Lobes of the penis without apparent stimuli. Median caudal seta subequal to the others, which in both sexes are abou.t as long as the body. Ungues in every tarsus dissimilar each to the other. Fore tarsus of 6 about 1^ as long as the tibia, which is nearly twice as long as the femur ; its joints, in diminishing order, rank 2 »& 3 subequal, 4>, 5, and 1. Fore tarsus of ? (excluding joint 1) about f as long as the tibia and joint 1 comljined ; the femur about as long as the tarsus, whose joints rank 2, 3, 5, 4. Hind tarsus (excluding joint 1) about y as long as the tibia and joint 1 comljined ; its joints rank 5, 2, 3 subequal to L The iirst joint in these tarsi is obsolescent. Numph latent under stones or at the roots of water-weeds, in streams and rivers. Body broadest at the mesothorax ; head slightly narrower than the pronotum, and in anterior view trilateral, with the vertex arched and the oral r(^gion truncate ; antenntie inserted about midway between the anterior ocellus and the sides of the face; that ocellus is smaller tlian the others ; oculi moderately distant from each other in 6 . Pronotum transversely quadraugular, arched above, nearly straight at the sides, and obtuse at the anterior lateral angles. Abdomen plump, slightly convex beneath, and somewhat quadrangularly arched above in segments 2-9 ; pleura? dilated considerably in segments 3-8, slightly concave above, fringed with clavate or spathulate hairs, and contributing to form, with the steeply sloping sides of the dorsum, a hollow for the lodgment of the tracheal brauchia; ; those of segments 2 and 3 are obliquely truncate at their posterior angles, but the pleura? of segments 4-7 are there acuminately pointed, and constitute a series of uncinate serratures on each side of the body ; the pleune of segment 8, less largely developed than their predecessors, are posteriorly more acutely pointed in 6 than in 2 ; those of segment 9 terminate behind each in a triangular point, which is perpetuated in the imago. The angularity of the dorsal arch, above referred to, is due to longitudinal series of protuberances, ridges, or tubercles, one on each side of the middle of the back, extending from segments 2-9 ; in segments 2 and 3 each promi- nence is surmounted by an acute conical tubercle ; in segments 4-7 each ridge terminates behind in an unciform tubercle pointing towards the tails ; in segments 8 and 9 the ridges end abruptly. Abdomen broadest in segment 4 or 5, narrower posteriorly than in front ; a line drawn touching the outer edges of the pleurte on each side would describe a curve. Tracheal branchia; are borne by segments 3-7, and diminish in size successively from the foremost ; those of segment 7 are completely obtected by the preceding pair. The foremost lamina; are broad and obliquely quadrilateral, with^he corners obtuse or rounded off, and have their greatest extension between the lower anterior and the upper posterior corners ; the margin below the latter of these is slightly refuse ; the trachea enters the lamina near the former. The hindermost of the tracheal branchia; have ovate laminie, auricled obtusely at the base on the lower side. The other branchiae exhibit gradations of form intermediate between these. Caudal sette nearly | as long as the body; for some distance from the roots only their joinings are setulose and their joints nude ; afterwards, until shortly before their extremities, the joinings are beset with SECOND SERIES. — ZOOLOGY, VOL. III. 17 126 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMEEID.E OK MAYFLIES. longer and sharper setulae, mingled with minute spreading hairs, while the joints become narrowly plumose or distichously pubescent; towards their extremities the joints are again nude, and their joinings beset with yerticils of very minute hairs. Palpus of maxilla i. about | as long as the lacinia ; its terminal joint is subequal in length to the remainder, and joint 2 is longer than joint 1. Lacinise of maxilla ii. broader than the lobes of the labium. Hind leg the longest ; the tarsus (claw excluded) about ^ as long as the tibia. Eore femur smooth underneath in the typical species ; the tarsus nearly I as long as the tibia. Antennae setaceous, of moderate length, with minute verticillate hairs at the joinings. Si/nonymi/. Leptophlehia, Westwood, 1840 (part) ; Potamanthus, Pictet, 1843-5 (part). Type. E. excrucians, Walsh. Distribution. Northern Temperate E-egions. Etymology. A hybrid combination of a Greek derivative with the Latin diminutive "ella." Nym])hs of the typical form inhabit N. America as well as Europe. E. ignita 6 im., Avith L. marginata 2 im., were contypical of the unrestricted Leptophlebia. Ephemerella ignita, Poda. Plate XIV. a (legs, d head and forceps). Ephemera ignita, Poda, Ins. Mus. Grsec. 97 (1761). — E. eryltiroplitJiahna, Schr., Fn. Boica, ii. pars ii. 197 (1798).— £. Xfusca,\ & diluta, Steph., 111. Brit. Eiit. vi. 58 (1835).— E. apicalis,\ rufescens,\ & rosea, ! id., op.cit. vi. 59 (1835). X Baetis obscura, ! id., op. cit. vi. 05 (1835) ; Walk., List of Neuropt. lus. iu Brit. Mus. part iii. 558 (1853). Potamanthus erylhropht/talmiis, Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevropt. ii. Epbem. 232, pis. xxix. [written iu error " erytlirocephalus (larvc) "] & sxx. [adult] (1813-5) ; Walk., List &c. 544 (1853) ; Hag., Eut. Ann. (1863), 21.— ? P. ffibbus, Pict., Hist. &c. 226, pis. xxxi. &xxxii. [im. & subim.] (1843-5) ; Walk., List &e. 544 (1853).— ? P. fcneus, Pict., Hist. &c. 229, pi. xxxiii. [egg, nymph, subim., & adult] (1843-5); Walk., List &c. 545 (1853).— P. apicalis, Pict., Hist. &c. 236 (1813-5) ; Walk., List &c. 544 (1853).— P. dilectus [for dilutus], Pict., Hist. &c. 236 (1843-5).— P. dilutus, Walk., List &c. 545 (1853) ; Hag., Ent. Ann. (1863), 19.— P. roseus, Pict., Hist. &e. 236 (1843-5) ; Walk., List &c. 545 (1853). Ephemerella ignita, ! Etn., Trans. Eut. Soc. London (1871), 98, pis. ii. 5 [wiug] & v. 7-7 a [details] ; Meyer-Diir, Bull. Soc. Ent. Suisse iv. 310 (1874) ; Rostock, Jahresb. d. Ver. f. Naturk. Zwickau, 1877, p. 85 (1878).— ?£. yibba, Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. Loudon (1871), 99; Meyer-Dur, Bull. Soc. Ent. Suisse, iv. 316 (1874) ; Rostock, Jabresb. d. Ver. f. Naturk. Zwickau, 1877, p. 85 (1878).— ?E. (Bnea, Etn., Trans. Eut. Soc. London (1871), 99; Meyer-Diir, Bull. Soc. Ent. Suisse, iv. 316 (1874). Suhimago {living).— Wui^s> black-grey, the wing-roots and sometimes the hind wings greyish white. Eernora olive-grey, often with a dark band before tlieir distal extremity ; tibiae grey ; tarsi black-grey or grey-black. Sette brownish grey with red-brown joinings. Imago, 6 {living). — Upper division of eyes brownish red or burnt sienna; lower divi- sion olivaceous, or sometimes rather yellower. Head and prothorax olivaceo-fuscous ; meso- and metanotum fuscous or jet-black. Abdomen above dark reddish fuscous, with the opaque tips of the segments sometimes narrowly ochraceous, and often with the sides of the segments tinged with the same colour ; the last segment paler, sometimes dull greenish : venter sometimes light- or warm-sepia brown, sometimes fuscous or greenish EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEIDJE OR MATELIES. 127 fuscous, the segments sometimes each with a pair of short dark divergent lines followed by two dots at the base, the 9th segment often brown-ochreous, with a longitudina 1 piceous streak along each side. Setre sopia-grey with darker joinings ; forceps testaceous or greenish grey. Legs either almost sulphureous, with the fore tiliia lutescent and all the tarsi testaceous ; or with the fore femur yellowish- or olivacoous-grey, the hinder femora paler and tinged rather more with yellowish, the fore tibia dark olive-grey, the tarsi and hinder tibiae grey ; a diffused obsolescent or nebulous rubigineous band is some- times perceptible at the extremity of the femur, and the ungues are often piceous. Wings vitreous, with the stronger nervures and sometimes the bulla almost faintly piceous or amber-colour. ? {living). — Eyes dark olivaceous ; vertex of head marbled with black, pale ochreous or orange, and grey. Pronotum olivaceo-fuscous varied with pitch-brown. Meso- and metanotum pitch-brown. Abdomen more opaque and tinged with dull greenish than in the d' , but rather similar : the borders of the dorsal vessel dark. Legs olivaceous, the femora with a grey band just before their pale distal extremity, the fore tibia sometimes testaceous, the tarsi greyish. Wings much as in the c7 , but sometimes with the bulla more distinctly coloured. The ventral lobe of the penultimate segment is slightly retuse ; and the pleurae of the 8th segment are posteriorly acute. Eggs green, becoming browner when dried. Length of body, s 6-9, 2 6-10 ; wing, 6 7-9, ? 7-5-11 ; seta?, ? im. 7 & 8-12 & 11, subim. 8 & 7 ; setse, ? im. 7 & 8-8 & 9, subim. 7 & 9 millim. Hab. Europe, from Portugal, near Cintra (300-400 ft. alt.), Madrid, and mid-Italy, near San Marcello, in the Apenniuo Pistojese (2100-2700 ft. alt.), northwards to Great Britain, and at least to Holland and Germany ; but the extent of its continental range farther north and east is not yet ascertained. In England the fly is plentiful from June till September ; but it was common at the end of April in Portugal. The nymph varies greatly in colour ; the darkest and most strongly marked specimens are prevalent in trout-streams, those of lighter colours in warmer streams and rivers, the variations being largely determined by the nature of the bottom. I believe that Pictet was mistaken in describing as distinct species merely colour- variations of this one ; and that some of the differences indicated by him in the adult flies are attributable to the ordinary mutations of colour undergone by them during their advance to full maturity, and during the decline of life. The form of the forceps-basis in my earlier figure (1871) differs from that in PI. XIV. 24 a, in the breadth of the extremity of the median projection ; but this is only because the insect was then not adjusted so well for drawing as the more recent subject. The part which is shaded thereabouts in the former figure was hidden when the newer drawing was made, and the acute unshaded portion was brought into full view, by throwing the extremity of the insect further back. Ephemerella inermis, sp. nov. Suhimago {dried). — Pore wings transparent, light brownish grey, with neuration in some lights dull greenish grey, changing in other lights to duU light yellowish, the membrane and opaque longitudinal nervures becoming dirty brownish white near the wing-roots ; hind wings rather pale. Setse dark sepia-grey, with black joinings. Legs 17* 128 EEY. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. dull light-brownisli yellowish, the fore tarsus and distal portion of the tibia, and in the hinder tarsi the ungues, tip of the terminal joint, and distal borders of the other joints brownish, the brown being sometimes modified with reddish. Imago {dried), 6 . — Thorax above polished, and of a rich deep pitch-brown, the anterior half of the mesonotum in one example much lighter in the midst. Abdomen above either pitch-brown, with the last 3 segments rufescent, and the lateral borders of tbe dorsum light yellowish; or dark rufo-piceous, with tlie last segment yellowish; the joinings opaque. Venter lighter than the dorsum ; genitalia light yellowish. Setae whitish sepia- grey, with black joinings. Wings vitreous; the neuration in some lights colourless, the longitudinal nervures in other lights becoming faintly tinged with light greenish grey, changing in other positions to very light amber ; at the wing-roots of the fore wing is, ajiparently, a light pitch-brown spot. Fore leg, as an opaque object, dull greenish grey, with the coxa, trochanter, and knee lighter, the tarsus dirty whitish or greyish white, with the joinings and ungues brownish ; in transmitted light the femur becomes light yellow-amber. Hinder legs in opaque view, Avith the femur and base of the tibia, yellowish amber, the distal portion of the tibia, and the tarsus dirty whitish, the latter liaving the ungues, the end of the terminal joint, and the distal borders of the other joints light reddish-brown. ?. Thorax above polished brown-ochreous ; the pronotum destitute of raised dots. Abdomen discoloured ; ventral lobe of the 9th segment broadly rounded and almost entire, the pleural points obtuse. Wings as in 6 , but with the longitudinal nervures rather more definitely colovired. Legs very similar to the hinder legs of tlie d , but in one of the specimens only the ungues and not the joinings of the hinder tarsi are light brownish. Length of body, 5-G ; wing, 6-8 millim. Hub. Colorado, at Denver, Arkansas Canon, and Colorado Springs (Mus. Comp. Zool. Cambridge, Mass.). Ephemekella guamdis, sp. nov. Plate XIV. 2i b (neuration). Subimago {dried). — Wings dark sepia-grey, or sometimes of a slightly blacker grey, with dark neuration, excepting at their extreme base, where both nervures and mem- brane are more or less of a dull greenish-yellow, varied witb brownish. Coxa^, trochanters, hinder tibiae and tarsi, fore tarsus, and sometimes the fore tibia very pale reddish (burnt-umber) brown : femora pitch-brown. Setae pitch-black at the base and then sepia-brown. Imago, ? [dried). — Thorax bright brown-ochreous. Abdomen shrunken through desic- cation, and discoloured ; in one example the colours along the middle of the dorsum have considerably changed, but on both sides the segments are narrowly bordered with dull ochraceous along the pleurae, and a series of large rounded blotches of a dark purplish brown colour [pitch-brown modified with intense burnt-carmine] occupies the immediately adjoining parts of the intermediate segments (perhaps excepting segment 9). Setaj in opaque view pitch-black near the roots and then pitch-brown ; in transmitted light the black changes to pitch-brown, and the lighter parts appear whitish warm sepia- grey, with rufescent joinings. Ventral lobe of segment 9 emarginate ; the jdeui-al points EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. 129 short and acute. Wings vitreous, the fore wings tinged slightly with light hrownish grey in the pterostigmatic region of the marginal and submarginal areas ; neuration piceous, strongly defined (excepting the cross veinlets in a large extent of the marginal and submarginal areas, and those in a small portion of the next area of the fore wing), the longitudinal nervures becoming lighter at the wing-roots. Fore legs in opaque view pitch-brown, ligliter or more nearly raw-umber brown from the coxa to the base of the femur ; in transmitted light the tibia and tarsus are less opaque than the femur, the dark parts become rufo-piceous, and the lighter parts somewhat of an amber-colour. Hinder femora similar in colour to the fore femur ; but the tibiae and tarsi are uniformly whitish yellow-ochre, with the ultimate joints and ungues, or in some lights the whole of the tarsus, clove-brown. Length of wing, ? 15-18 ; setse, ? im. 16-17, subiiu. 15 millim. Hah. Colorado (M'^Lach. Mus.) ; The Geysers, Yellowstone, 4th of May (Mus. Comp. Zool. Cambridge, Mass.). The arrangement of the colouring matter of the abdomen in the specimen described above is not to be implicitly trusted. Ephemerella Walkeri (renamed). XBaetis\\fuscata,W\a\\s., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 570(1853) [part]: Hag., Smithson. Miscell. Coll. (18G1), Syiiop. Neuropt. N. Am. 47. Imago, S {dried). — Thorax above dark pitch-brown, varied on the pleurae and sternum with light burnt-umber brown. Abdomen discoloured, dark pitch-brown. " Fore legs piceous " {teste Walk.) ; hinder femora dark rufo-piceous, the tibia? and tai'si dull pale subtestaceous. Wings transparent, their longitudinal neuration in some lights pale fuscescent. Length of wing 8 millim. Hal). St. Martin's Falls, Albany Iliver, Hudson's Bay (Dr. Barnston) ; one example in Brit. Mus. The 6 subimago doubtfully referred to this species by Mr. F. Walker is still in the collection, and is most probably a llhithrogena. The name given by Walker to this species, having been preoccupied in Ba'etls, is superseded : had lie not published a description of the type-specimen, it might Avell have remained nameless and uudescribed. Ephemerella invaria, AValker. Plate XIV. 24 c (penis). { Ba'etis invaria, ! Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. iu Brit. Mus. part iii. 568 (1853) ; Hag., Smithson. Miscell. Coll. (18U1), Syuop. Neuropt. N. Am. 48. Ephemerella invaria, \ Etn., Ent. Mo. Mag. v. 87 (18G8) ; ! id., Trans. Eut. Soc. London (1871), 100, pi. V. 8, 8 a [details] . Imago, d {dried). — Thorax above light rufo-piceous ; abdomen discoloured, — dorsum fuscescent, the joinings opaque, the last two segments modified with light dull reddish orange, — venter greyish, the base of the forceps, and the two or three segments imme- diately preceding it, light brown ochre. Fore femur and tibia reddish golden brown, the latter with a dull light reddish spot near its distal extremity, the tarsus yellowish wiiite ; hinder femora translucent, very light straw-colour or pale yellowish-fuscescent, the tibise and tarsi dull whitish, with the apical edges of the joints and the ungues fuscescent. Wings transparent, their neuration usually colourless, but in one instance distinctly pale fuscescent. Length of wing 8-10 millim. 130 EEY. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID^ OE MATELIES, Sal). St. Martin's Falls, Albany River, Hudson's Bay (Dr. Barnston) ; 3 examples in Brit. Mus. Ephemeeella excrucians, Walsh. Ephemerella [type] excrucians, ! Walsh, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Pliilad. (1862), 377; Hag-, Proc. Ent. Soc. Pliilad. ii. 178 [im^).—E.Xinvana (part), 1 Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 100. Subimago [dried). — Wings very light ochraceous grey, changing in some postures to whitish grey, with suhopaque neuration of a similar whitish- or faintly whitish yellow- amber tint, c? femora in opaque view light yellow-ochre, changing to light yellow-amber in transmitted light; tibia; and tarsi dull whitish, the ungues and ends of the tei-minal joints of the hinder tarsi brownish, the fore tibia and tarsus in opaque view dull brownish, but in some lights dull yellowish ; legs of ? lighter, with pale brownish ungues. Setae light sepia-grey, their joinings at most opaque. Imago, (S . [Oculi in life [fide "Walsh) egg-yellow above, pale fuscous below.] — {Dried) : — Thorax above piceous or light rufo-piccous : abdomen rufo- or fusco-piceous above, with opaque joinings, the last two segments tinged with dull light reddish orange ; venter greyish or yellowish, the last two or three segments and the bases of the forceps light brown ochreous. Setoe whitish, with fuscous joinings. Wings vitreous, with colourless neuration. Hinder femora very light yellow-amber ; fore femora darker, and of a browner yellow-amber in opaque view; hinder tibice and tarsi dull yellowish or brownish white, the tips of the tarsi and the ungues light brownish ; fore tibia in opaque view dull yellowish brown, with a light brownish spot at the tip, the tarsus rather lighter, with brown ungues, but in transmitted light they are both brown-ochreous white, the tibia becoming light yellowish amber towards its base, but marked at the tip, as before, with the opaque brown spot. 2 (dried). — Body yellow-ochreous, the head, pronotum, and abdomen sometimes red- dened, the abdominal joinings subopaque or darker than the rest of the segments : on each side of the pronotum, close to the hinder border, directly in front of the sutural ftirrow in advance of the wing-roots, is a raised reddish-brown dot. Legs similar to the hinder legs of the d . Wings \dtreous, with colourless or whitish neuration, the fore wings with 9-11 cross veinlets in the marginal area beyond the bulla (counting them along the subcosta). Setae white, sometimes with the first 2 or 3 joinings reddish. Venter nearly of the same colour as the femora in segs. 1-7, and then darker ; the lobe of the 9th segment broadly rounded off and almost entire. Length of body (after Walsh), B-5-7-5 ; wing, 6-8 ; setae, 6 im. 11-13, 2 9-12-5 millim. Eab. Eock Island, 111. (Walsh) ; Detroit, Mich. (Mus. Comp. Zool. Cambridge, Mass.). Two 6 im. in the Brit. Mus. were named by Mr. Walsh. Ephemerella consimilis, Walsh. Ephem.erella consimilis, Walsh, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. (1862), 378 ; Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 100. According to Mr. Walsh, this insect differs from E. excruoiaiis in the form of the mesothorax, which in E. consimilis is 4-5 times as long as wide instead of less than thrice EEV. A. E, EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEELD.E OE MAYFLIES. 131 as long as wide, and has the prsBscutum half as long again as wide instead of scarcely- longer than wide. Sternum ferruginous, legs immaculate, hut the tip of the fore tibia and the adjacent joint of the tarsus in the d fuscous. Length of body, osition with those of the ? , but only faintly tinged with grey ; in $ cretaceous, with segments 1-5, and sometimes the extreme base of 6, grey above, but with tlris colour broadly interrupted at the joinings by the ground-colour, and widely so iu the middle of segment 1 ; moreover the patches of grey are intersected l)y a fine longi- tudinal cretaceous line, and are invaded by the same colour in the neighbourhood of the pleurse, where a series of grey dots is distinguishable, placed singly in the segments close to their anterior lateral angles ; the dots are present also in the hinder segments, which otherwise are uniformly cretaceous. The ventral segments of ? are often marked on each side with a grey dot. The 6 genitalia are pale throughout, and when dried have a light yellowish testaceous tint. Setae white. Eore leg in some lights tinged witli Eoman sepia-grey, and with femur simply grey, becoming when dry whitish with the femur bistre- or light sepia-grey in 2 , and greyish or brownish grey in d . Hinder legs greyish white (the ? with yellowish-white femora when dried), with a black dot on the upper edge of the femur a little before the knee, visi])le also on the ? fore femur. The stronger portions of the longitudinal nervures, and the usual coloured part of the front border of the wings, are greyish iu the dried s and sepia-grey in the ? . Length of body 3-5 ; wings, d -4, ? 5 ; sette, 6 im. 18 & 13, subim. 3 & 2-5-3 & 3-5 ; seta?, $ im. 3, subim. 2"25 millim. Rab. Great Britain to Moscow, and Scania (Wallengren) to Lago Maggiore, where I have taken it at Pallauza. It abounds in Belgium and Holland, as well as in lowland Switzerland. Pastor Wallengren adopts the prevalent surmise that this was the species which Linne meant to describe as E. horaria in 1758. I have not adopted the name (on account of the vagueness of the diagnosis) in the absence of authentic types. Vague diagnoses are, at the most, essentially generical. Var. nivuLORUM. Imago {lioing), 2 ■ — Head and prothorax translucent whitish grey, varied with dark 19 ,» 144 EEV. A. E. EATON ON EECENT EPHEMEEID.E OR MAYFLIES. black-grey. Meso- and mefcanotum light umber-hrown, with black sutures. Abdomen white, segments 1-3 partly shaded above very slightly with greyish. Legs white ; the fore coxa, femur, and base of the fore tibia dark grey ; hinder femora white. d {living). — Similar; meso- and metanotura lighter than in the $ , and with sutures less distinctly black. Costa, subcosta, radius, sector, and cubitus blackish grey to rather beyond the middle. Length of wing 3, setse about 12 millim. Hub. Dorsetshire, in the Syndeford brook, near Shedrick, in the parish of Thorncombe, Cliard; also the Dove, near Mayfield, Ashburne, Derbyshire (June). I suspect this is the insect quoted as. English by Pictet under C. % lactea in 1843-5. C^Nis LACTELLA (renamed). Canis if lactea, Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevi-opt. ii. Epliem. 27G, pi. xliii. 1-4 & xliv. (1843-5) ; Hag., Trans. Eut. Soc. London (1873), 397. Imar/o (after Pict.). — Head grey, with the vertex a little lighter. Thorax light ochreous, with the sides of the prothorax and the mesonotum fuscescent ; the latter marked with a cruciform spot of the ground-colour. Abdomen white, with very slightly defined spots on the sides of the segments. Sette whitish. Legs tinged very faintly with lutesceut. Wings vitreous, colourless ; subcosta and radius black ; the other nervures lutesceut, colourless in the d . (S {dried). — Vertex of head pitch-brown. Thorax translucent ; the pronotum rather greyer than the remainder in some lights ; meso- and metanotum pervaded with a light brownish amber-colour, the metathorax viewed sideways rather yellower amber. Ter- minal segments of the abdomen very light yellowish am])er or light brown ochreous ; the remainder whitish amber, with traces of the same yellowish colour at the sides of the back; legs and setae uniformly whitish, or whitish amber with a faint yellowish tint. Length of body, $ 4, d (dried) 3 ; wing, ? 4, d 3"5 ; setaj d 11 millim. Kal). Lakes of Geneva and Zurich, in the middle of summer. I obtained it at Geneva (1230 ft. alt.) on the 10th August, in profusion at gas lamps. Pictet's fig. 1 is a very good likeness of the living 6 im. Cjcnis halterata, Pab. PI. XV. 2G. Ephemera halterata, Fab., Gen. Ins. 24,4 (1777) ; id., Sp. Ins. i. 384 (1782) ; id., Mant. Ins. i. 243 (1787) ; Vill., C. Linn. Ent. iii. 18 (1789) ; Gmel., Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. xiii. i. 2G29 (1790) ; 01., Encyc. Metb. vi. 418 (1791) ; Fab., Ent. Syst. emend, iii. pars i. 69 (1793) ; Schr., Fn. Boica, ii. pars ii. 198 (1798) ; Lat., Hist. Nat. Crust. & Ins. xiii. 95 (1805) ; Zet., Ins. Lap. 1045 (1840) ; Hag., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1873), 396. — E. brevicauda. Fab., Ent. Syst. emend, iii. pars i. 69 (1793) ; Walck., Fn. Paris, ii. 9 (1802) ; Lat., Hist. Nat. Crust. & Ins. xiii. 96 (1805) ; Zet., Ins. Lap. 1045 (1840). Brachijcercus chironomiformis, Curt., Lond. & Edinb. Pbil. Mag. ser. 3 (1834), 122. Cmiis chironomiformis, Steph., 111. Brit. Ent. vi. 62 (1835); ! Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. (1871), 94.— C. macrura, ! Stepb., 111. Brit. Eut. vi. 60, pi. xxix. 1 (1835) ; Walk., List of Neuropt. in Brit. Mus. 583 (1853); Hag., Ent. Ann. (1863), 10; ! Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1868), 279-82 [nympb] ; \id., op. cit. (1871), 93, pi. v. 4 [details]; Hag., op. cit. (1873), 397; Meyer-Diir, Bidl. Soc. Ent. Suisse, iv. 308 (1874) ; Rostock, Jabresb. d. Ver. f. Naturk. Zwickau, 1877, 80 (1878). — C. interrupta, Stepb., 111. Brit. Ent. vi. 62 (1835) ; Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevropt. ii. Epbem. 287 (1843-5) ; Walk., List EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPIIEMERID.E OR MAYFLIES. 145 &c. 583 (1853).— C. grisea, Pict., Hist. &c. 278, pi. xlv. 1, 2 {18i3-5) ; Walk., List &c. 581 (1853) ; Brau., Neuropt. Austr. 25 (1857) ; Aiisscr., Ann. A. Soc. Nat. Modena, Ann. iv. 133 (18G9) ; ! Joly, Bull. Soc. Hist. Nat. Toulouse, iv. 147 (1871) ; id., Bull. Soc. d'Et. &c. Augers, 41-2, Note B (1876).— C. halterata, ! Hag., Eut. Ann. (18(33), 11. Subimago [Umng). — Wiugs tinted with greyisli, especially towards the costa. Setae light blackish grey. Imago {Uc'ing). — d . Head gi'ey-black, with the stipes of the antennae and the cervical joining sepia-grey. Pronotum medium ivoiy-black ; meso- and metanotum jet-black, changing to pitcli-ln-own when dried. Alidomen of 6 grey, tinged towards the sides with medium ivory-black ; each dorsal intermediate segment has the track of the dorsal vessel, and a spot on each side of it at the base of the segment, pellucid, and each of those segments beneath has a pellucid spot on each side near the middle; the dorsal joinings of the segments are opaque, with the extreme overlapping edge of the integu- ment whitish. Setce grey, with light blackish-grey joinings. Legs pitch-black ; the tibiae, tarsi, and under edges of the femora light blackish-grey and translucent. Wings transparent, smoky, slightly greyish in the vicinage of the costa for some distance from the wing-roots ; costa, subcosta and radius, and in some lights the other longitudinal nervures pitch-black ; but viewed with transmitted light, in some positions, most of the nervures mentioned, excepting the thicker parts of the three foremost, become trans- lucent whitish. 2 [living). — Fore femur grey ; hinder femora yellowish white. Abdomen above l)lackish grey, becoming ochreoiis towards the joinings and sides of the segments ; venter tinged with greenish grey. Length of body, 6 4-5, ? 6 ; wing, d 4-5, $ 7 ; setae, 6 im. 14 & 15-15 & 16, subim. 3; ? im. & subim. 2-3 millim. Hub. Europe, from Scania and Smalaud (Wallengren) or Lapland (Zet.) to Portugal and Italy ; and from Great Britain to Germany and Switzerland. Abundant at Cintra, 27th April (400-COO ft.) ; Toulouse (430 ft.) ; Bale and Geneva ; and near San Marcello, in the Apennino-Pistojese (2200 ft.). The form of the spot on the forceps-basis varies considerably in dried examples, and sometimes the spot disappears in drying. CtENis kobusta, sp. nov. Imago {dried), d .—Thorax lucent raw-umber or light pitch-brown, the pronotum rather paler laterally, the vertex of the head rather redder brown, approaching light burnt-umber. Abdomen greyish white above; the joinings very narrowly grey-black, liordered narrowly with whitish at the bases of the segments ; the dorsal vessel and the sides of tlie dorsal segments pale, the lighter space encroaching largely upon the darker in segment 7 ; genitalia stained slightly with brown-ochreous ; venter and forccps-ljasis uniformly whitish ; setae white. Legs whitish ; fore femur and base of fore tibia varied with sepia-grey ; ungues and hinder femora whitish yellow-amber. Wings transparent, slightly smoky along the costal margin ; costa, subcosta, and radius for some distance from the wing-roots dark sepia-grey. 2 . Head and thorax rather similar in colour to those of the 6 . Abdomen opaque with light greyish dorsal markings (dark grey in the subimago) upon a dull light brown- 146 EEV. A. E. EATON ON RECENT EPHEMEEID^ OR MAYFLIES. ochreous ground-colour, of a similar pattern to those of the 6 . Setse white. Legs nearly as in d , but in some lights the fore tibia and tarsus appear sepia-grey. Length of body, cJ 4, ? 6; wing, d 4, 2 6 ; sette, d im. about 15, subim. 2-5 & 3-3 & 4, 2 im. 4-5, subim. 3 & 4 millim. Hub. Holland, the Ijssel, near Gouda, by the nearest lock on tlie way to Stein ; end of July. C^Nis Harkisella, Curtis. Brachycercus Harrisella, Curt., Lond. & Edinb. Phil. Mag. ser. 3 (1834), 122. Ccenis Harrisella, Stepli., 111. Brit. Ent. vi. 61 (1835) ; Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevropt. ii. Ephcm. 286 (1843-5) ; Walk., List Neuropt. iu Brit. Mas. part iii. 583 (1853).— C. luduosa, Pict, Hist. &c. 283, pi. xlv. 3 (1843-5) ; Walk., List &c. 582 (1853) ; Hag., Stet. Eut. Zeit. xxyi. 229 (1865) ; ! Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. (1871), 97, pi. v. 6 [forceps] ; Hag., Trans. Eut. Soc. Lond. (1873), 399; Meyer-Dur, Bull. Soc. Ent. Suisse, iv. 308 (1874); Rostock, Jalircsb. d. Ver. f. Naturk. Zwickau, 1877, p. 79 (1878).— C. Xhalterata, ! Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. (1868), 279-81 [nymph]. Oxynjplia luduosa, Eurm., Handb. d. Ent. Bd. ii. Abth. ii. 797 (1839). Ephemera I brevicaitda, Blanch., Hist. Nat. dcs Ins. iii. 54 (1840). Suhimago {living). — Head and pronotum greyish black; meso- and metanotum black. Abdomen light brown-ochre or light cinnamon ; setse black. Wings tinted with l)lackish grey ; their neuration dark. Legs white, sometimes smoky white ; the tarsus, tibia, and estrenyty of the femur of the fore leg carbonaceous black. Imago, $ & d {living). — Head and thorax pitch-black, with the sutures and pleurye of the latter Roman sepia-brown. Abdomen Roman or warm sepia-brown, with a short dark line on each side at every joining, and pale elongated spots near the bases of the setaceous pleural prolongations of segments 7-9 ; forceps and setse grey or light blackish grey. Wings whitish, with grey nervures, excepting the piceous su1)costa and radius. Fore tarsus warm sepia ; hinder legs light blackish grey, with the joinings black. Length of body, 6 6-5, 2 5-7 ; wing 5-5-6 ; setse, d im. 25, subim. 4, 2 subim. 3 & 4 millim. Sab. England, in the Kennet, near Reading, and in Somersetshire; Berlin (Burm.); St. Petersburg (Hag.) ; Lake of Thun (Pict.). The nymph is easily recognized by its strangely subcorneal ocelli : on one occasion I caught one in the part of the Garonne flowing between St. Michel and the lie des Grands Ramiers, Toulouse. It probably flies by night. CyENIs oophoba, Kollar MS. Ca-nis oophvra, Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevropt. ii. Ephedra. 284, pi. xlv. 4 (1843-5) ; Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 582 (1853) ; Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 97. Adult, 2 {dried). — Brilliant brown; legs lutescent, spotless. Wings Avhitish, with their neuration more distinct than iu ordinary species of Ccenis, and the radius stouter and darker. Length of body 4 ; expanse of wings 11 millim. Hab. Sardinia (after Pictet). Described from a defective 2 example. CiENIS ARGENTATA, Kollar MS. Canis argentata, Pict., Hist. Nat. Nevropt. ii. Ephem. 279, pi. xliii. 6 (1843-5); Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 381 (1853) ; Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 96. EEV. A. E. EATON OX RECENT EPHE.AIERID.E OR MAYFLIES. 147 Si(U)nago {dried), 2 .—More delicate and slender than C. halterata and C. lactella. Head and thorax grey, witli silvery reflections, the prothoras a little lighter. Abdomen grey at the base and brilliant white at the tip. Fore legs grey ; liinder legs brilliant white. Setae white, faintly auuulated with blackish. Wings slightly greyish, the sub- costa and radius black. Length of body -i, setae 3 ; expanse of wings 8 milUm. Hah. Sicily (after Pictet). C.EXIS HiLAKis, Say. Ej^hemera hilaris, Say, Jouru. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. viii. 43 (1839) ; Le Coute, Complete Writings ofT. Say, ii. 413 (1859). C(Bnis hilaris, Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part iii. 583 (1853) ; Hag., Smithson. Miscell. Coll. (1861), Synop. Neuropt. N. Am. 54; Walsh, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. (1862), 381 : Hag., Proc. Eut. Soc. Philad. ii. 179 (1863) ; Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 96. Imago (abstract after Say). — Thorax pale fulvous. Abdomen white ; each of the apical segments with three fuscous dots on each side. Length of body 2 millim. Hub. Indiana ; September. CzENIS DIMINUTA, Walk. Canis dimimita, ! Walk., List of Neuropt. Ins. in Brit. Mus. part. iii. 584 (1853) ; Hag., Smithson. Miscell. Coll. (1861), Synop. Neuropt. N. Am. 55; ! Etn., Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1871), 95.— C. arnica, Hag., Smithson. Miscell. Coll. (1861), Synop. Neuropt. N. Am. 55. Imago {dried), , 5, 6 subequal to 2, and 1 ; joint 1 is the stoutest, and joint 3 is nearly as long as all the others put together. Mandible tapering from a l)road oblique subtriquetrous base to a pungent tridentate crown ; fangs conical, the intermediate very little smaller than the others, just below the bases of which the edges of the crown are minutely denticulated ; endopodite strong and relatively long, subcyliudrical, bidentate at its extremity, with a row of denticula- tions on each side just below the fangs ; its base is immediately preceded by a tuft of velutinous or puberulose setae [their puberulence is not distinguishable in a figure drawn to a scale of enlargement as low as 90], about 5 in number, and rather longer than the endopodite ; molar region absent. The mandibles, as well as the 1st maxillae, are virtually symmetrical ; the latter terminate each in 4 strong, flattened, acuminate, chitinous teeth, the innermost of which are the strongest, and have 2 or 3 microscopically puberulose seta? close to their inner base ; a short, solitary, smooth setula arises from the inner face of the lacinia near the transverse suture ; the palpus, geniculated at the first joining, has the proximal joint strongly reflexed ; its joints in sequence of lessening length rank 3, 1, 2, 4 ; the first two are stout, the others slender. Labium truncate- obtriangular, slightly rounded off at the corners, and bevelled at the sides to fit into the gap in the mentum ; tongue and laciniae of 2nd maxillae absent ; palpi geniculated, tapering distally, the proximal joints divaricate, and each nearly as long as the next joint. The joinings of the anterior ventral segments are sometimes dimly discernible through the plastron. Dr. Vayssicre describes and figures (1882, figs. 106 & 108) 5 pairs of obtected tracheal branchiae ; his figures should be consulted. Caudal setae pliimose, indistinctly articulated, and about f as long as the body. Legs slender ; the fore tibia, in about ^ its length from the tip, is armed interiorly with a row of articulated spines, denticulated on their inner sides. Hind leg rather the longest; the tarsus (claw excluded) less than ^ as long as the tibia ; this last about f as long as the femur. Type. P. variegatum, Lat. Distribution. Rivers of continental Europe, and Madagascar. Etymolo(jy. -Kpoau-niov and (TTo^to, from the mouth-partS being well concealed by the large mentum &c. as with a little mask. Prosopistoma foliacetjm, Fourcroy. Pis. XV. 27 [wings, after Vayssiere] & XLIII. [nymph]. Le Binocle h queue en plumet [Hist, abreg. des Ins. dc Paris, ii. 660, pi. xsi. 3 e. f. g. (1764)] ; Geoff., op. cit. ed ii. loc. cit. (1785) & ed. iii. (1799). Binoculus foliacens, Fourcroy, Ent. Paris, ii. 539 (1785). — B. pennigerus, Lat. Hist. Nat. Crust. & Ins. iv. 122 (1802). — B. pisciforme, Dumeril, in Diet. So, Nat. iv. 106, Paris, Lenormant, art. Binocle (1816). EEV. A. E. EATON OX RECENT EPHEMERIDiE OR MAYFLIES. 151 Limulm peymigerus, Miill., Eatom. p. 127, no. 62 (1800?) [cited by Lat. 1802]. Prosopistoma punctifrons, Lat., Nouv. Ann. du Mus. (3), ii. 33 (1833) ; id., op. cit., iii. 40 (1843); Lucas, Diet. Univ. Hist. Nat. d'Orbigny, ed. ii., art. Prosopistoma (18G9); Joly, Rev. d. Soc. Savants (2), V. 4-6 (1870) ?; id., Mem. Soc. Nation. Sc. Nat. Cherbourg, %\\. 329-336 (1871) ; MuL, Ent. Mo. Mag. viii. 227 (Feb. 1872) ; id., Zoologist, 2955 (1 Feb. 1872) ; id., Proc. Ent. Soc. London, 1st Jan. 1872, p. xlvi. (19 Feb. 1872) ; Wcstw., Athena;um (Feb. 24th, 1872) ; N. Joly, Mem. de FAcad. des Sc. Inscript. et Belles-let. de Toulouse (7), vol. iv. Bulletin, pp. 437—138 (1872) ; id., op. cit. pp. 440- 441 (Mars, 1872) ; id., in Le Progres Lib. de Toulouse (19 Mars, 1872); Westw. & IV^Lach., Ent. Mo. Mag. viii. 279 (1 April, 1872) ; iidem, Proc. Ent. Soc. London, 19 Feb., p. vi. (April 1872) ; E. & N. Joly, Ann. d. Sc. Nat. (5), Zool. xvi. Art. no. 7, pp. 16, pi. xiii. 1-16 (Sept. 1872); M^Lach., Ent. Mo. Mag. X. 109 (Oct. 1873) ; id., Rep. Brit. An. for 1873, p. 118 (1874) ; id., Journ. Linn. Soc, Zool. xii. 145 (1874) ; Joly (' Separate' of). Rev. des Soc. Sav. (2), iii. 69-72, p. 7, Note E (Digue Dec. 1874) ; N. &. E. Joly, in Le Prog. Lib. de Toulouse (17 Mars, 1875) ; iidem, Mem. de FAcad. des Sc. Inscript. & Belles-let. de Toulouse (7), via. 606-607 (1875) ; Joly, Feuil. d. Jeun. Nat. v. 68 (1875); id., op. cit. vi. 53-54, pi. ii. 1-5 (Mars 1876); id., Bull. Soc. d'Etudes &c. d' Augers, 1874-5, pp. 44-45, Notes E & G (1876) ; N. & E. Joly, Rev. des Sc. Nat., Montpellier, v. 307 &c., pi. viii. 32 [tracheal branchise] (Dec. 1876) ; Westw. Trans. Ent. Soc. London (1877), 189-194, pis. iv. B 1-5 & v. 1-12 [after Joly] ; Joly, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (5), viii., Bull., pp. 70-71 (Avril 1878); id., Feuil. d. Jeun. Nat. no. 92, pp. 99-100 (Juiu 1878) ; Joly & Vays., Compt. Rend, des Seauc. de I'Acad. des Sc. Paris, Ixxxvii. 263-5 (Aout 1878) ; Joly, Pet. Nouv. Ent. ii. no. ccv. 265 (Oct. 1878) ; id., Feuil. d. Jeun. Nat. no. 98, pp. 24-25 (Dec. 1878); Joly & Vays., Bull. Soc. d'Etud. Sc. Nat. Nimes, no. vi.-vii. (1878) ; Joly, op. cit. (1879), pp. 3-7 ; id., Proc. Ent. Soc. Fr. (1880), Bull. no. xi. 109 ; id.. Bull. Soc. d'Etud. Sc. d' Angers, 1878-9, pp. 157 note 2, 158 note 1, 164 notes, 167 Note B (1880) ; Vays. Anu. des Sc. Nat. (6), Zool., xi. 1-15, pi. i. 3-17 (1881) [nymph, subim., & details] ; id., op. cit. xiii. 77, pis. vi. 57, X. 105-109, si. lOi & 110-114 [nymph and details] & 116 [diseased nymph] (1882).— P./o/(«- ceum, Lucas, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (6),ii., Bull. Eut. xcv. (Sept. 1882). Chelysentomon or Ch. pennigerum, N. & E. Joly, in Le Prog. Lib. de Toulouse (Fev. 1872) ; iidem, Mem. d