438 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Oct., 



eous-blue of the caudal tibiae is paler than in the type. The wing of 

 the male is distinctly very pale yellowish-hyaline proximad. 



Gamnula pellucida (Scudder). 



On Santa Catalina Island this species was found to be extremely 

 local, but plentiful in a small area of short grass, where one male and 

 eight females were taken on August 7. At Mill Valley, August 23, 

 the species was found uncommon on dry grassy hillsides, two females 

 being taken, while a single male was captured at Merced, August 30, 

 in very dry, }^ellow, oat-like grass. 



The Santa Catalina Island and Merced individuals are more yellowish 

 in color than the Mill Valley specimens. 



Hippiscus pardalinus (Saussure). 



Six specimens, two males and four females, from the San Bernardino 

 Mountains, taken by Dr. Joseph Grinnell, belong to this widely dis- 

 tributed species. One male and two females are from Fish Creek, 

 at an elevation of 6,500 feet, June 18-20; the remaining individuals 

 being from the South Fork of the Santa Ana River, at an elevation 

 of 6,200 to 6,700 feet, July 1-24. 



The disk of the wing is orange vermilion in all the specimens instead 

 of yellow as usually described, but in general characters and proportions 

 no other differences are noted. Several of the females have a con- 

 siderable amount of hoary-white suffusion. 



The only previous exact Californian records were from San Diego 

 and Rock Spring, southern California. 



Hippiscus negleotus (Thomas). 



Four males and four females of this species from the South Fork 

 of the Santa Ana River, San Bernardino Mountains, taken at an 

 elevation of 6,200 feet, on July 6 and August 26, by Dr. Joseph Grinnell, 

 and a pair from Mt. Pinos, the female with a supplementary "Potrero" 

 label, taken June, 1904 ( 9 June 7), by F. Grinnell, Jr., have been 

 examined. A considerable amount of variation is present in the 

 series, but nothing other than one would expect in this very variable 

 species. The tegminal stripe is very broadly marked in one male 

 specimen. 



This is the first record of this species from southern California, the 

 only previous records from the State being from the Sierran region. 



Leprus interior Bruner. 



A single male of this species from the foothills of the Bird Spring 

 Mountains, McCollough Range, Nevada, August 11, has been examined. 

 It is very similar in character to a series from the Salt Lake Valley, 



