Table Of ContentPROC. ENTOMOL. SOC. WASH.
97(4), 1995, pp. 791-798
NEW NEARCTIC SPECIES OF ONCOCEPHALUS KLUG (HETEROPTERA:
REDUVIIDAE: STENOPODAINAE)
J. Maldonado Capriles
Department of Crop Protection, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico
00681; home address: Urb. Aponte 6 11, Cayey, Puerto Rico 00736.
—
Abstract. The three new species Oncocephalus mochis from Sinaloa, Mexico, O. pen-
insularis from Lower California, Mexico, and O. variabilis from Arizona, California, and
New Mexico are described; and O. nubilus Van Duzee is redescribed. A key to the species
occurring in Mexico and United States of America is given.
Key Words: Reduviidae, Oncocephalus new species, O. nubilus Van Duzee, redescrip-
tion. United States, key
Thanks to Norman D. Penny, California ing a different color pattern. Extreme mea-
Academy of Science (CAS), the Golden surements and color variation for O. var-
Gate Park, San Francisco, California, I was iabilis n. sp. are given in parenthesis.
able to study the specimens of Oncocepha- The discal cell in Oncocephalus is open
lus in the collections under his care. Types caudally, the arrow in Fig. 14 pointing to
of the new species herein described are de- area where closing vein is lacking. This is
posited in CAS. Giacchi (1984) keyed all a generic character overlooked until now.
nine known American and Giacchi and Ten Old World species examined exhibit
Maldonado (1983) added the new species this character. The hypopygial caudal pro-
O. quadrivittatus from Nicaragua. Many re- cess is located before the caudal margin and
cords of O. nubilus probably are O. varia- on each side, a setose process is found (Fig.
bilis new species. There are about 195 Old 2). The caudal margin of the hypopygium
World species (Maldonado 1990). exhibits a different, simple pattern of fine
At least among the specimens of Onco- setae in each species (Figs. 3, 11).
cephalus studied the species were found to As in most stenopodaine genera the fore
be very variable. For example, markings on tibia has an apical tuft of sensory hairs and
the connexival margins and segments can a calamistrumlike organ. The eyes are large,
be absent, or they may be one or two; the slightly surpassing the lower surface of the
postocular margins can be parallel-sided head and narrowly apart underneath, more
and then angularly bent or rounded to col- so in females.
lum; the relative lengths of the lobes of the Depth of femur is its thickness in lateral
pronotum may differ, the annuli on the legs aspect. S-tubercIe stands for setigerous tu-
can be dark, pale or absent, the humeral bercle throughout the text. The anteocular
width of the pronotum and the size of the space is the distance from the anterior mar-
lateral tubercle before the transverse prono- gin of eye to the apex of the antennophore
tal constriction may vary. To aid in describ- and the postocular space the distance from
ing these variations, illustrations of pronota the posterior margin of eye to the insertion
are divided in half, with each half illustrat- ofthe collum. All measurements are in mm.
.
792 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
Key to the Species of Oncocephalus in thin U; coriai veins usually set on stramineous
Mexico and North America stripes resulting in darker discal areas mar-
gined with stramineous; short section of vein
R -t- M at level ofdiscal coriai cell brown, of
1 Anteriorlobe ofpronotum with a lateral tuber- same color as connexival marginal markings.
cle before transverse constriction; males with Baja California O. peninsulahs n. sp.
pilosity offirst antennite shorter than diameter Posterior lobe ofpronotum with brown fasciae
ofsegment; discal cellofcoriumandoutercell and basal band broad, not forming a thin U;
ofmembrane with black patches 2 coriai cells uniformly colored; hemelytra and
- Anterior lobe ofpronotum without such tuber- vein R + M concolorous. Southwestern United
cle; males with pilosityoffirst antennite 2x or States O. variabilis n. sp.
3X diameter of segment; discal and outer cell
of membrane without patches 3
2. Second antennite about 2.5 times longer than Descriptions
first, the lattertwice as long as anteocularmar-
gin; posteriortibia withdense long setae, setae Oncocephalus mochis Maldonado,
1.5-2 times as long as diameteroftibia. Color New Species
gray cinereus O. geniculatus Stal 1^
- Secondantennitenearly 3 timesas longasfirst, Figs.
—
the latter 2/5 longer than anteocular margin; Male. Head: anterior lobe stramineous
posterior tibia with dense short setae, setae not
much longerthandiameteroftibia. Colormore above, with a brownish longitudinal stripe
stramineous O. apicidatus Reuter each side of median line, laterally with a
3. Head, pronotum, and hemelytra except later- longitudinal brown stripe from anterior
ally, black, connexivum reddish dorsally; an- margin of eye to apex of head; posterior
tennite II about 2.5 times as long as first. Baja lobe dark brown above, brown below; ocel-
California O. erectus Van Duzee
- Head, pronotum and hemelytra brownish, stra- lar callus black. I antennite brownish, base
mineousoryellowish;connexivum notreddish, stramineous, pilosity golden, internal setae
more or less stramineous with or without about twice diameter of segment; II seg-
blackish ornamentation; antennite II variable ment brownish, slightly paler than I, a long
4
preapical stramineous band, long fine pi-
4. Anterior lobe of pronotum with median stripe
3X as wideasmedian sulcus (Fig. 4); posterior lose, pilosity 3 times diameter of segment,
lobe mostly brown, with paramedial carinae, 1 gradually decreasing in length toward apex,
-I- 1 small spots lateral to carinae, and humeral more abundant on inner half of perimeter;
angles stramineous; hemelytra uniformly pale III and IV segments dark gray, pilosity
brown. Sonora, Mexico O. inochis n. sp. scarce, about twice as long as diameter of
- Anterior lobe of pronotum with median stripe
narrow, not much broader than median sulcus; segment. Rostrum stramineous, last seg-
posterior lobe of pronotum less extensively ment darker toward apex. Pronotum (Fig.
brown, lateral margins stramineous; hemelytra 4): anterior lobe mostly stramineous dor-
differently colored, paler or clearly bicolored sally, anterolateral angle blackish brown
5 laterally, a relatively broad median longi-
5. Hemelytra bicolored (Fig. 7), laterally to pter-
ostigma and outer longitudinal half of corium tudinal stripe, 1 + 1 paramedial brownish
yellowish-stramineous, contrasting with the stripes; posterior lobe dorsally mostly
darkerscutellum, innerlongitudinal halfofcla- brown, humeral angles, 1 + 1 small anterior
vus and corium, and membrane; the yellowish spots, and carinae stramineous. Pronotum
area ofthe hemelytracontinuous with the sim-
laterally, pleurae, coxae, trochanters, and
ilarly colored lateral areas of pronotum ....
O. niihilus Van Duzee thoracic sterna stramineous. Femora stra-
- Hemelytra without such contrasting areas, al- mineous, profemur and metafemur with in-
mostuniformlycolored;theyellowareasofthe complete annulus at midlength, preapically
pronotal margins not extending into hemelytra brown; mesofemur with a preapical brown
6
band; metatibia with short basal and middle
6. Posterior lobe of pronotum with narrow para-
medial longitudinal fasciae connected basally annuli. Scutellum blackish brown, apical
by a narrow transverse band, thus forming a spine stramineous. Hemelytra pale brown.
VOLUME 97, NUMBER 4 793
Figs. 1-12. Oncocephalus mochis Maldonado n. .sp., male holotype. 1, clasper. dorsal view. 2, caudal spine
and dorsolateral process (dip) ofhypopgyium, caudal view. 3, dorsocaudal margin ofhypopygium, caudal view.
4, pronotum (two color variations), dorsal. Oncocephalus nuhihts Van Duzee, male holotype. 5, head, dorsal
view and detail of surface. 6, head, lateral view. 7, coloration of body, dorsal view. 8. clasper, dorsal view. 9,
caudal spine and dip, caudal view and lateral detail of dip. 10, profemur, lateral view. 1 1, dorsocaudal margin
ofhypopygium. 12, female, VIII tergum.
membranal cells with scattered stramineous spiracle, all three arranged in a zig-zag pat-
spots. Connexival margin with or without a tern. White scale-like setae each side of ty-
long and a short brown spot; abdominal lus, above metapleura, and suture before
sterna yellowish stramineous, each with first abdominal sternum. Head: length to
two brownish spots caudad to the brownish apex of collum 2.3, width across eyes 1.85,
794 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
greatest width of anteocular lobe 1.0, width July 1922, C. T. Dodds collector. One in
of postocular lobe behind eyes 1.3, width JMC, others in CAS.
ofeye 0.5, height ofeye 0.97, length ofeye The trivial name refers to the type local-
0.71, interocular space 0.8, anteocular mar- ity. The almost uniform pale brown color
gin 0.65; distance between eyes underneath of the hemelytra makes this species stand
0.2, width of ocellar callus 0.75, length of out from nearly all of its congeners because
collum 0.3. Length of antennal segments: I, of their mostly stramineous or clearly bi-
2.25; II, 4.15; III, 2.26; IV, 2.34; three s- colored fore wings as in O. nubilus. Only
tubercles lateroventrally behind eyes, the O. erectus Van Duzee, from Baja Califor-
rest of head with minute globose s-tuber- nia, has darker, but almost black hemelytra.
cles. Pronotum: width across anterolateral
Oncocephalus nubilus Van Duzee
angles 1.44, width across humeral angles
Figs. 5-12
3.25, width at transverse constriction 2.05, —
length of anterior lobe 1.54, length of pos- Redescription of male holotype. Head
terior lobe 1.40, anterior lobe with very (Figs. 5, 6): Anterior lobe above strami-
small s-tubercles in rows and along lateral neous, laterally brownish or dark brown,
margins; median sulcus on apical third ventrally dark brown with a transverse fig-
only; surface of head as in O. nubilus (Fig. ure-8 yellow spot midway from bucculae to
5); posterior margin slightly concave above eyes; posterior lobe, neck, and underneath
scutellum. Scutellum: basal width 1.2, between eyes brown. Ocellar elevation
length to base of apical spine 1.0, length of brown, black between ocelli. Eyes black.
spine 0.5, with scarce granulations and White scale-like setae around tylus and an-
M
small s-tubercles. Hemelytra: -I- Cu vein tennophore, in front and around eyes. An-
with or without small s-tubercles; not or tenna: antennite I brown, paler below; II
slightly surpassing apex ofabdomen; length slightly paler brown than I laterally, stra-
9.75, greatest width 3.38. Fore leg, lengths: mineous internally, apex grayish brown; III
coxa 1.0, trochanter 0.9, femur 4.4; depth grayish brown; IV missing. Rost—rum stra-
of femur 1.16; armature consisting of 10 mineous, apex brown. Pronotum anterior
conical teeth alternating with 3 to 5 small lobe: median longitudinal stripe brown;
s-tubercles; tibia length 3.9, setae decum- area on either side of median stripe stra-
bent and slightly shorter than diameter of mineous on basal half, posterior halfalmost
segment; tarsi: first two together slightly orange; disc of posterior lobe blackish
longer than third, 6.5:5, claws expanded ba- brown, marginal areas stramineous (Fig. 7);
sally, curved. Middle leg, lengths: coxa mesopleura pale brown; metapleura brown.
0.75, trochanter 1.0, femur slightly thicker Mesosternum medianly with abundant,
apically, 4.25, tibia 4.62; first two tarsal thick, decumbent whitish setae, narrowly
segments combined as long as third, 0.65; margined with brown. Metasternum brown,
claws and pilosity as in fore legs. Hind legs: margined laterally and anteriorly with a
coxa 1.24, trochanter 0.95; femur 6.90, band of whitish setae. Scutellum blackish
slightly expanded apically; tibia 7.8, thinner brown—, from disc to apex of spine yellow.
toward apex, consequently pilosity after Legs anterior: coxa and trochanter yel-
midlength longer than diameter of segment; lowish; femur with basal third stramineous,
first two tarsal segments together longer middle third pale brown with subcircular
than third, 0.8:4.5; claws as in fore legs, yellowish areas ventrally and with more ex-
less curved. External genitalia as in Figs. tensive yellow areas dorsally, apical third
1-3. Total length o—f body 14-15 mm. brown with yellow apical margin; tibia yel-
Holotype male. Sinaloa, Los Mochis, lowish, postbasal and about midlength
MEXICO, vii-20-1922, C. T. Dodds collec- brown annuli; tarsi yellowish; middle: coxa
tor; 5 paratypes; all from the type locality. and trochanter yellowish, apical third
VOLUME 97, NUMBER 4 795
brown; hind: coxa brownish, trochanter 7.82, straight; tibia 9.2; tarsi 0.4; 0.4; 0.8;
stramineous, femur with a median and api- claws of middle and hind legs less thick-
cal long brown annulus; tibia with basal and ened basally than on front leg; pilosity of
postbasal brown annuli. Hemelytra: base of femur and tarsi as in first two legs, setae on
clavus and corium yellowish, rest of wing tibia longer than thickness of segment. He-
brownish (Fig. 7). Abdomen brownish each melytra almost reaching apex of abdomen.
side of ventral keel, reddish brown below Abdomen keeled to base ofVI sternum. Ex-
line of spiracles, both bands of about same ternal genitalia as in Figs. 8, 9, 11. Total
width; connexivum variable, usually yel- length of body 17.5 mm. Females are very
low, margin with a central black, narrow similar in morphometry and coloration;
marking. VIII tergum as in Fig. 12; overall length of
Head: Length from interocular sulcus to body from 1—4 to 18 mm.
apex 1.9, width across eyes 1.90, width of Holotype. San Bernardino Ranch, Co-
eye 0.55, length of eye 0.7, height of eye chise Cty, ARIZONA, F H. Snow collector,
1.10, interocular space 0.8, anteocular space in Van Duzee collection at the CAS, San
0.7, postocular space 0.6, width behind eyes Francisco, California. Reported by Henry
1.25; minutely granulose (Fig. 5); lateral and Froeschner (1988) from Texas, Arizo-
margins of postocular lobe rounded to col- na, and California. Also known from north-
lum. Antennal segments: I, 2.2; II, 4.51; III ern Mexico.
and IV missing; I with abundant long, fine
Oncocephahis peninsularis
setae on ventral surface, short decumbent
Maldonado, New Species
setose dorsally; II with similar pilosity, se-
tae gradually decreasing in length toward — Figs. 13-17
apex; III long pilose, hairs twice as long as Male. Mostly stramineous. Head: ver-
thickness of segment. Rostral segments: I tex with short brown dash each side of me-
and II, 0.9; III, 0.6. Pronotum with mod- dian line; laterally with poorly defined
erately abundant small granules; length 3.5, brown line not quite reaching apex of head,
width at anterior angles 1.6, width at hu- beneath blackish brown; posterior lobe dark
meral angles 3.94, length of anterior lobe brown above and laterally, below strami-
1.62; two inconspicuous carinae extending neous; ocellar callus black. Antenna: I an-
from anterior lobe to basal third ofposterior tennite brown, basally stramineous, II
lobe; posterior margin shallowly concave brownish basally gradually deepening to
above scutellum. Scutellum: width at base brown apically. III and IV brown. Prono-
1.08, length to base of apical spine 1.4, tum (Fig. 17): disc of posterior lobe with a
length of spine 0.5, spine slight upcurved. median, relatively broad brownish stripe
Fore leg: coxa 0.5, trochanter0.9, two small and a narrower stripe on each side, the me-
spines on ventrolateral edge; femur (Fig. dian extending into anterior lobe as a nar-
10): length 4.7, greatest depth at about mid- row stripe. Scutellum dark brown, medianly
length, 1.12, armature usually consisting of from base or postbasally to apex of spine
10 short teeth alternating with 3 to 5 small with a tapering yellowish-white stripe. Ros-
s-tubercles; tibia length 4.70, slightly thin- trum: first segment mostly yellowish, sec-
ner apically; tarsi 0.4; 0.4; 0.9; pilosity de- ond stramineous or brownish above, third
cumbent and shorter than corresponding brown. Coxae and trochanters yellowish.
—
segment, except on tarsi where it is slightly Femora yellowish: anterior with long api-
longer than their diameter. Middle leg: coxa cal brown annulus, annulus w—ith irregular
0.70; trochanter 0.90; femur 5.00, slightly small yellowish areas—; middle with apical
thicker at midlength, 0.4; tibia 4.81 long; brown annulus; hind with apical and mid-
tarsi 0.25; 0.30; 0.60; pilosity as in fore leg. length b—rownish annuli. Tibiae yellowish;
Hind leg: coxa 1.10; trochanter 1.10; femur anterior three-annulate, the last two fused.
796 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
Figs. 13-23. Oncocephalus peninsidaris Maldonado n. .sp., male holotype. 13, clasper, dorsal view. 14,
hemelytron. 15, caudal spine and dip. 16, dorsocaudal margin of hypopygium. 17, pronotum and scutelluni,
dorsal view. Oncocephalus variabilis Maldonado n. sp., male holotype. 18, clasper, dorsal view. 19, apex of
clasper, internal view. 20, caudal spine and dip, caudal view. 21, pronotum, dorsal. 22, profemur, lateral. 23,
VIII tergum of female, dorsal.
—
faint or incomple—te; middle similar to an- marked, marked basally or with dark brown
terior; posterior with apical and preapical margin.
—
annuli. Tarsi yellowish. Hemelytra (Fig. Head. Length from interocular sulcus
14): corial veins set on stramineous stripes, to apex of head 1.35, width across eyes
thuMs cells with pale brown discal areas; R 1.35, width of eye 0.54, length of eye 0.65,
+ yellowish, section laterad ofdiscal cell anteocular space 0.32, postocular space
dark brown. Connexival segments un- 0.51, width behind eyes 1.1, anterior mar-
—
VOLUME 97, NUMBER 4 797
gin of ocellar callus at about midlength of cies; the blackish marking along R + M
eye, ocellar callus as wide as interocular vein or inner vein of embolium is visible to
space. Antenna: I, 2.0; II, 4.4; III, 1.13; IV, the naked eye.
1.21; I abundantly long pilose on outer half
Oncocephalus variabilis
of perimeter, II long pilose, setae gradually Maldonado, New Species
shorter towards apex; III and IV scarce pi-
Figs. 18-23
lose, —setae about twice as long as segment. —
Head surface as in nuhilus (Fig. 5); con- Male. Overall color stramineous; head,
spicuous s-tubercle lateral on antenniferous pronotum, first pair of legs darker than he-
tubercle, 2-3 s-tubercles ventrolaterally be- melytra and last two pairs of legs; orna-
hind eyes. Pronotum (Fig. 17): length 2.75, mented moderately with shades of brown.
anterior width 1.24, humeral width 3.42, Head: postocular space brownish, before
width at constriction 1.45, length ofanterior and after eyes brownish laterally; gular re-
lobe 1.34, carinae across constriction ob- gion brown; I and II antennite pale brown,
solete, anterior lobe with scarce small gran- same as anteocular region, the latter with
ulations; posterior lobe with abundant small short apical annulus. III and IV gray. Ros-
granulations and very small globose s-tu- trum: segments I and II slightly paler than
bercles; posterior margin shallowly concave I antennite, III brown. Eyes and ocellar cal-
above scutellum; anterolateral and humeral lus blackish brown. Pronotum (Fig. 21)
—
angles sharp but not produced. Scutellum: slightly paler than head; anterior lobe lat-
width 1.4, length to base of spine 1.2, eral margin dark brown, median longitudi-
length of spine 0.4. Hemelytra: length 10.5, nal stripe and short extensions of fasciae of
greatest width 3.36. Abdominal sterna posterior lobe brown; posterior lobe with
keeled to midlength of sixth. Fore leg: coxa median subtriangular area, paramedial fas-
length 0.6, trochanter length 0.9; femur ciae brown and common base brown (para-
with scarce and short s-tubercles; length types of both sexes show same pattern but
4.2, depth 1.0; armature: 9 teeth, each one with much wider paramedial fasciae, no
alternating with one small s-tubercle; tibia two exactly alike). Meso- and metapleura
slightly thinner preapically, setae on side with slightly darker anterior areas (these
facing femur shorter than diameter of seg- darker areas present in two paratypes only).
ment, length 4.1; tarsi: first two segments Coxae and trochanters stramineous; femora
together shorter than third (0.51:—0.65); brown apically, on anteri—or femora not
claws as in nubilus. Middle leg coxa forming an annulus; tibiae anterior with
length 0.3, trochanter length 1.0; femur basal, postbasal, and apical ill-defined an-
thickness at midlength 0.32, slightly nar- nuli (traces of these annuli in most para-
rower preapically; tibia length 3.4. Hind types); last two femora with well defined
leg: coxa length 0.6, trochanter length 0.75; apical annulus only; tarsi quite dark, an ev-
femur decumbent setose; tibia length 7.2, ident abnormality as these are stramineous
long setose on apical 4/5. Genitalia as in in all other specimens.
Figs 13, 15, 16. Total length of body 15.0 Head: Length 2.25 (2.19-2.44), width
mm. — across eyes 1.69 (1.50), interocular space
Holotype male. 15 mi. N, El Refugio, 0.81 (0.68), anteocular spac—e 1.00, postoc-
LOWER CALIFORNIA, vii-1938, Mich- ular space 0.37; pronotum anterior lobe
elbac—her and Ross colls., in CAS. Para- length 1.56 (1.32-1.69), posterior lobe
types 4, same data as holotype; 1 in JMC length 1.31 (1.25-1.50), humeral wi—dth
others in CAS. 3.18 (3.00-3.25). Antennal segments I,
The trivial name makes reference to the 1.87 (1.31); II, 3.87 (3.12); III-IV thinner
peninsula that characterizes Lower Califor- and shorter than first, too twisted for accu-
nia. The key characters identify this spe- rate measurements. Rostrum I, 1.00; II,
798 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
1.15, III, 0.75; first not reaching anterior vi.16.37, E. C. Van Dyke coll.; 1. Browley,
margin of eye. Scutell—um as wide as long V.1940, R. R Allen coll.; NEW MEXICO—
].18 (1.12-1.25). Legs length of femora Cadsbad, Carera, iii.38, R. R Allen coll; 2
4.12 (3.74-3.87), 4.37, 6.75; depth of pro- from S. L. Yu—ma in JMC, others in CAS.
femur 1.12 (Fig. 22), armature consisting 8 Discussion. The trivial name variabilis
or 9 small tooth-like spines each alternating refers to the very variable morphometry of
with 3^ small hemispherical s-tubercles; the species. The overall coloration and the
tibiae 3.75, 4.00, 7.00; tarsi 1.75, 1.00, first rostral segment not reaching the ante-
1.37. Fore wing length 9.38, not quite rior margin of eye are constant characters.
reaching apex of abdomen, width 3.50. Literature Cited
Genitalia as in Figs. 18-20. Overall length Barber, H. G. 1930. Essay on the Subfamily Steno-
14.7 (13-1—6 mm). podinae of the New World. Entomologica Amer-
Female. Overall coloration as in male. icana, New Series 10: 149-238.
Dimensions fall inside the extremes given Giacchi, J. C. 1984. Revision de los stenopodainos
americanos. VI. Las especies americanas del ge-
for the males. Two specimens are 17.0 long. nero Oncocephalus Klug, 1830 (Heteroptera-Re-
VIII tergum—as in Fig. 23. duviidae). Physis Seccion C 42(103): 39^2.
Holotype. Male, S. Luis Yuma, ARI- Giacchi, J. C. and J. Maldonado Capriles. 1983. A
ZONA, viii.11.40, presented by E. C. Van new species of Oncocephalus Klug, 1830 (Redu-
viidae: Stenopodainae) from Nicaragua. Caribbe-
Dyke, in C—AS. Paratypes 27, both sexes; an Journal ofScience 19(3-4): 61-63.
ARIZONA 4, same data as holotype; 4, Henry, T J. and R. C. Froeschner 1988. Catalog of
Ehrenberg, vii.20.1946, E. C. Van Dyke the Heteroptera, ortrue bugs, ofCanada and Con-
collector; CALIFORNIA—1, Ft. Yuma, tinental United States. J. F Brill, New York. 958
pp.
Aug.21.1924, E. R Van Duzee collector; 8, Maldonado Capriles, J. 1990. Systematic Catalogue
Coachella, v.17.1928, E. C. Van Dyke col- of the Reduviidae of the World (Insecta: Heter-
lector; 2, Blythe, viii.3.40, J. W. Tilden optera). SpecialPublicationoftheCaribbeanJour-
nal ofScience, UniversityofPuerto Rico, College
coll.; 2, Blythe, v.12.37, E. R Van Duzee of Arts and Sciences, Mayagiiez, Puerto Rico
coll.; 1, Lone Pine, Inyo Co., Diaz Lake, 00681. X + 694 pp.