1914.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 525 



Local Distribution. — According to Davis, this species is frequent 

 in the Coastal District. It appears to occur inland occasionally in 

 the Pine Barrens.-^ 



Ecological Distribution. — According to a personal communica- 

 tion from Mr. Davis, this species occurs in the same kind of situations 

 as C. lyristes. On one occasion he adds that he took a considerable 

 number in a rather dry field (Tuckerton). 



Locality Records. — 



Pine Barrens. — Jamesburg (Davis); Lakehurst (Davis). 



Coastal District. — Tuckerton (Davis) ; (? Ocean View, Fox) ; Cold 

 Spring (Davis). 



C. palustris Blatchley. 



General Range. — Probably an Austral species, recorded, to my 

 knowledge, from New Jersey, southeastern Pennsylvania, North 

 Carolina and Indiana. 



Local Distribution. — Not common; Middle and Coastal Dis- 

 tricts, seemingly more frequent in the former. 



Ecological Distribution. — Occurs in open fresh-water swamps 

 in locations similar to those frequented by C. 7iebrascensis. 



Locality Records. — 



Middle District.— ^ew Brunswick (N. J. St. Mus. Rep.) ; Trenton, 

 in Delaware River swamp (Davis, in personal letter). 



Philadelphia Neck (Wenzel, A. N. S); Elmwood, in Tinicum 

 meadow, in a soggy spot covered with dense growth of cut rice-grass 

 (Fox); Tinicum (Rehn). 



Coastal District. — Dennisville (Davis), edge of salt marsh (personal 

 letter) . 



C. fuscostriatus. 



General Range. — Extreme southern New Jersey to North 



Carolina, Georgia and Texas. 



Local Distribution. — One individual taken by Henry W. Fowler, 

 Oct. 24th, 1909 at Town Bank, Cape May Co. (A. N. S.). 



ORCHELIMUM Serv. 

 0. yulgare Harris (= Agile De Geer). 



General Range. — Canada to Florida and Texas, west to the 

 Great Plains. 



-* After examining some specimens of this species kindly sent me by Mr. Davis, 

 I am almost certain that I have taken the same species at Ocean View in Cape 

 May County. At the time I received Mr. Davis' specimens I had already 

 donated my own collections to the Philadelphia Academy and removed to Indiana, 

 and was therefore unable to directly verify my suspicions by comparing my 

 material with determined specimens sent by Mr. Davis. Some of the specimens 

 in my collection which I have labelled lyristes will, I think, prove to be caudellianus. 



