142 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF 



[April, 



Winter Park, IX, 7, 1911, (R. & H.), 

 4 d 1 , 19. 



Charlotte, VII, 27, 1913, (R. & H.), 



19. 



South Carolina. 



Columbia, VII, 28, 1913, (R. & H.), 



19. 

 Manning, V, 23, 1914, (Witmer Stone), 



1 <?, [A. N. S. P.]. 

 Ashley Junction, VIII, 15, 1913, (R.), 



19. 

 Yemassee, IX, 4, 1911, (R. & H.), 



8 d, 8 9. 



Georgia. 

 Rabun County, VII, 1910, (W- T. 



Davis), 10 cf, 10 9. 

 Rabun Bald, 4,000-4,800 feet, VIII, 



21, 1913, (J. C. Bradley), 1 9 . 

 Black Rock Mountain, 3,500 feet, V, 



20-25, 1911, (J. C. Bradley), 1 



juv. 9 . 

 Pinnacle Peak, VIII, 20, 1913, (J. C. 



Bradlev), 1 d". 

 Toccoa, VIII, 4-5, 1913, (H.), 1 9 . 

 Thompson's Mills, X, 1909, (H. A. 



Allard), 2 <?, [U. S. N. M.]. 

 Buckhead, VIII, 2, 1913, (R. & H.), 



5_cf, 49. 

 Vicinitv of Stone Mountain, VIII, 3, 



1913', (R. & H.), 2 <?. 



Macon, VII, 30-31, 1913, (R. & H.), 



.9 d% 19. 

 Augusta, VII, 29, 1913, (R. & H.), 



6 d, 3 9, 1 juv. d\ 2 juv. 9. 

 Isle of Hope, IX, 3, 1911, (R. & H.), 



19. 

 Brunswick, VIII, 30, 1911, (R. & H.), 



14 cf, 7 9. 

 Honey Island, VI, 1, 1912, (J. C. 



Bradley), 2 9 . 

 Billy's Island, VI-VII, 1912, (J. C. 



Bradley), 11 d", 49. 

 Suwannee Creek, VIII, 28, 1911, 



(R. & H.), 1 cf . 

 Hebardville, V, 15, 1915, (H.), 17 d, 



4 9,2 juv. 9 . 

 Homerville, VIII, 27, 1911, (R. & H.), 



6 d\ 119. 

 Albany, VIII, 1, 1913, (R. & H.), 1 <?, 



4 9,1 juv. cf. 

 Spring Creek, VI, 7-23, 1911, VII, 



16-29, 1912, VIII, 26-28, 1913, 



(J. C. Bradley), 5 <?, 8 9 , 1 juv. 9 . 



Florida. 



Jacksonville, IV, 1885, (Ashmead); 



VIII, 25, 1911, (R. & H.), 3(^,39. 

 St. Augustine, XI, 8, 1911, (G. P. 



Engelhardt), 1 <? ■ 

 Live Oak, VIII, 26, 1911, (R. & H.), 



6 <?, 3 9, 3 juv. 9. 



The comments made in the prefatory remarks on this genus 

 explain the synonymy given above. An analysis of the present 

 material for the ratio of individuals with abbreviate and those with 

 caudate pronota shows the larger series, as a rule, contain a greater 

 percentage of the caudate type and that geographically the difference 

 has no significance. Morse 31 has noted that in a series of one hundred 

 and fifty-two specimens from Waycross, Georgia, the two phases were 

 present in "equal numbers; but the usual proportion of long-winged 

 examples is much lower, ranging from 5 to 20 per cent." The 

 largest series examined by us from the region under consideration 

 show the following: Sulphur Springs, N. C, 27 specimens, 7 caudate; 

 Thomasville, Ga., 24 specimens, 6 caudate; Hebardville, Ga., 21 

 specimens, 2 caudate; Brunswick, Ga., 21 specimens, 2 caudate; 

 Rabun County, Ga., 20 specimens, 2 caudate; Greensboro, N. C, 

 19 specimens, 1 caudate; Homerville, Ga., 17 specimens, 2 caudate; 

 Yemassee, S. C., 16 specimens, 1 caudate; Billy's Island, Ga., 15 

 specimens, 2 caudate. From these series it will be seen that Morse's 

 general figures hold true. Rather curiously, the nine specimens 



Carnegie Inst. Wash., Publ. No. 18, p. 25, (1904). 



