SUBFAMILY I. PHANEROPTERIXJE. 



483 



bers from Jacksonville to Ft. Barrancas south to Homestead; 

 adults, July 7 August 23, nymphs March 6. 



The known range of A. ulileri is mainly southern, extending 

 from New Jersey west and north to central Indiana and Minne- 

 sota, and south and west to southern Florida, eastern Oklahoma 

 and central Texas. It is not recorded from Canada or Michigan, 

 and only from a single specimen without definite locality, from 

 Minnesota. In habitat it appears to be largely hygrophilous, 

 most of the records mentioning it as occurring on weeds or bushes 

 in or near low, damp woods from tidewater to 2,600 feet above. 

 In Virginia Fox (1917) says it is ''apparently the most abundant 

 representative of the genus in the Piedmont and tidew r ater sec- 

 tions, occurring chiefly in open country on the trees, bushes, weeds 

 and tall grasses of fields, pastures and roadsides." 



Of the call note of uhleri Allard (1912) says: "It consists of 

 a rapid silken shuffling sound, sh-sh-sh-sh, occasionally repeated. 

 At other times the notes become brief, staccato lisps, i-tsip-i-tsip- 

 i-tsip-i-tsip, followed by the usual sh-sh-sh-sh. Abrupt modifica- 

 tions of this sort nearly always get a similar response from the 

 other individuals." 



220. AMBLYCORYPHA ROTUNDIFOLIA (Scudder), 1862, 445. Round-winged 

 Katydid. 



Size medium for the genus. Color essentially the same as that of 

 oblonyifolia. Disk of pronotum with sides subparallel, female, feebly di- 

 verging behind, male; lateral carinse evident but rounded on basal two- 

 thirds; humeral sinus very shallow; hind margin of lateral lobes more 

 oblique and less broadly rounded than in oblongifolia. Tegmina ovate, 

 proportionally much broader, the wings but slightly protruding from be- 

 neath their tips. Hind femora reaching tips of tegmina in male, slightly 

 longer, female, armed on the lower, inner carina with four or five minute 

 teeth. Ovipositor more distinctly curved and more strongly serrate than 

 in either oblongifolia or iilrteri. Length of body, $ and 9, 19 20; of 



pronotum, $ , 5 6, 

 9, 5.8 G.4; of teg- 

 mina, $ and 9, 24 

 27; of hind femora, 

 $, 2225, $, 24- 

 27; of ovipositor, 9- 

 -11 mm. Width of 

 tegmina, 8.5 9.5 

 mm. (Fig. 160.) 



Fig. i do. a, Female. Natural size, b, Enlarged end of 

 ovipositor. (After Riley.) 



The round-winged katydid occurs frequently throughout In- 

 diana, though more abundant in the southern half of the State. 

 It is more of a terrestrial species than oblongifolia, being often 



