SUBFAMILY III. LOCUSTIN.E. 325 



of antennae, $, 5.3 G.2, $, 6.57.2; of pronotum, $, 2.3 2. G, g, 33.1; 

 of hind femora, .6.87.9, $, 9.4 9.7 mm." (Hebard.) 



Described from IT males and 12 females taken at DeFuniak 

 Springs, Fla., Aug. 30, 1915, in a ''boggy area of wire-grass and 

 bog plants which was not over 15 yards wide by 40 yards long." 

 While the general facies of this species is almost exactly that of 

 ]>nsi11us. it is very distinct by the characters given in key and de- 

 scription, and shown in Fig. 117. Although Hebard, as quoted 

 above, states that morsel is larger than pusiUus, K. & H. have re- 

 corded (1907, 294; 1910, 207) specimens of the latter from Pablo 

 and Atlantic Beach, Fla., measuring, males, 15.3, and females, 

 22.0 mm. in length of body. 



II. CAMPYLACANTHA Scudder, 1897a, 198. (Gr., ''bent'' + "spine.") 



Short, robust, moderately compressed species, having the head 

 rather prominent, especially so in male, the occiput arched and 

 elevated above the pronotum; fastigiiiin strongly declivent, wid- 

 ened and feebly concave in front of eyes ; face subvertical, frontal 

 costa shallowly sulcate, widest just above the antennae, its sides 

 thence feebly converging to clypeus; eyes of medium size, not 

 prominent; interocular space subequal to, male, or one-half wider, 

 female, than the greatest width of frontal costa; antennae rather 

 stout, more than half the length of body, male, longer than head 

 and pronotum together, female; disk of pronotum longer and 

 with sides more parallel in male than in female, median carina 

 very low, usually cut by only the principal sulcus; prozoua one- 

 half longer than rnetazona, feebly tectiforui, slightly rugulose, its 

 front margin truncate ; metazona nearly flat, distinctly rugose, its 

 hind margin obtusely angulate; lateral carinre absent; prosternal 

 spine short, conical, obtuse, slightly inclined backward ; front and 

 middle femora swollen in male; hind tibite with 9 10 spines on 

 outer margin ; abdomen of male feebly enlarged at apex, the sub- 

 genital plate terminating in a small tubercle. Five species are 

 known, all from the western United States, one of which ranges 

 eastward into our territory. 



140. CAMPYLACANTHA OLIVACEA (Scudder), 1875b, 472. Olive-green Locust. 



General color bright olive-green, varying occasionally to pale brown or 

 even fuscous; occiput usually with a darker green median stripe broaden- 

 ing behind, and this often enclosing a median yellowish line, side of head, 

 and sometimes the face tinged with yellow; antennas green at base, orange 

 at middle, the tips dusky. Pronotum irregularly flecked with short yellow 

 dashes. Legs greenish-yellow, the front and middle femora in part dull 

 orange. Tegmina green, ovate-lanceolate, generally reaching middle of ab- 



