SUHFAMILY VII. TRIGONIDIINJE. 735 



tips of tegmina. Length of body, $, 5.5 G, 9, G G.5; of tegmina, $, 

 4.55.5, 9, 5.56.3; of hind femora, $, 3.84, 9, 4.24.7; of ovipositor, 

 2.63 mm. 



Ormond, Lakeland, Lake Okeechobee, Ft. .Myers, Cape Sable, 

 Key West and Dvmedin, Fla., Oct. 2(J Apr. \:\ ( H*. X. ft.) Ke- 

 cerded from many localities in the southern two-thirds of Florida 

 by other collectors. About Dunedin both nymphs and adults oc- 

 cur throughout the winter being often beaten from the low 

 branches of oak and bayberry into an umbrella, where their move- 

 ments are so agile that they are captured with difficulty. They 

 occur for the most part on shrubs in the vicinity of ponds and 

 lakes and about the borders of wet hammocks, though a number 

 have been taken from mangrove and other shrubs on Hog Island. 



In the United States, typical </iiu<ll<i<-]ii is known only from 

 Florida, Ormond and Silver Springs being its most northern sta- 

 tions. It is said by K. & H. (191(5) to be widely distributed in 

 the West Indies and known from Central and northern South 

 America. Hebard (1915b) states that in March "the very pleas- 

 ant tinkling song of yunrtJaclii is to be heard everywhere on warm 

 evenings about Miami." 

 347a. CYRTOXIPHA GUNDLACHI COLUMBIAN: Caudell, 1907b, 237. 



Differs from typical gundlachi only by the characters given in key. 

 The average size is perhaps a little larger, but not greater than the larg- 

 est individuals of gundlachi. Length of body to apex of tegmina, and 

 9, 8.5; of pronotum, 1.5; of tegmina, 5.6 G. 8; of wings, 7.39.4; of hind 

 femora, 5 5.8; of ovipositor, 3.2 3.6 mm. 



Orlando, Fla., August 2 (Cotton] ; Ft. Monroe, Va. (/)f/r/.) 

 I regard this as a northern race of C. gtiiiilliicJti, the only differ- 

 ence of any note being in the size and armature of the ovipositor. 

 The cross-veinlets of the female tegmina, one of the characters 

 used in its separation, are as numerous and almost as prominent 

 in some females of gundlachi as in the northern form. Caudell's 

 types of coluinbiana were from Washington, D. C. and Falls 

 Church, Va. and its known range extends from those points south 

 and southwest to Dallas and Doucette, Texas. From Florida it 

 has been previously recorded only from Atlantic Beach. Of its 

 habits R. & H. (1916) say: "The species is thamnophilous and 

 dendrophilous and has never been found in the least abundant. 

 Its small size and retiring habits make it a very difficult insect 

 to collect." It occurs on shrubs and small trees, usually near 

 water. 



Allard (1910b) says of its song as noted at Thompson's Mills, 

 Ga. : "I have never heard it singing less than six or seven feet 



