THE INSECTS OF NEW JERSEY. 221 



American at all, and says of the latter that it seems to be a strictly 

 boreal species. 



COPTOTOMUS Say. 



C. interrogatus Fab. Locally common throughout the State in late fall 

 and early spring. 



ILYBIOSOMA Cr. 



I. bifarium Kirby. Woodside, common (Bf). 



COPELATUS Er. 



C. chevrolatii Aube. Staten Island (Lg). 



C. glyphicus Say. Throughout the State, taken in almost every month 

 of the year; locally common. 



MATUS Aube. 



M. bicarinatus Say. Orange Mts. IV, V, Westville X, 4 (Coll); Ft. Lee 

 VIII (Bt); Woodbury VIII, 7 (GG) ; Ocean Co, (Rob). 



AGABETES Cr. 



A. acuductus Harr. Millburn IV, 30 (Coll); Woodside (Bf ) ; Staten 

 Island in Woodland pools, VI (Lg) ; Woodbury VII, 7 (Brn). 



AGABUS Leach. 



A. parallelus Lee. Staten Island (Lg). 



A. seriatus Say. Great Piece Meadow V, 21 (Coll) ; Ocean and Mon- 



mouth Cos. (Rob) ; Brigantine Beach VII, 5 (Brn) ; all the species of 



this genus live in spring and creeks. 



A. obtusatus Say. Woodside (Bf ) ; Monmouth Co. (Rob). 

 A. punctatus Mels. Ft. Lee VI (div) ; DaCosta V, 30, Anglesea V (Coll). 

 A. semipunctatus Kirby. Paterson VII, 3 (Coll); Newark (Dn). 

 A. asruginosus Aube. Ocean Co. (Rob); "New Jersey" (Coll). 

 A. tceniolatus Harr. Common at Lakehurst (div). 

 A. disintegratus Cr. Throughout the State, locally common V-VII. 

 A. congener Payk. Great Piece Meadow V, 2, Vailsburg VI, 2 (Coll). 

 A. reticulatus Kirby. Monmouth Co. (Rob); Woodbury VI, 8, Anglesea 



V, VI (Brn). 

 A. erythropterus Say. Fort Lee, New Brunswick (Rob). 



A. gagates Aube. Throughout the State VI, VII. 



The "A. discors" Lee. of the previous edition was not well determined. 



It is a west coast species. 



RHANTUS Esch. 



R. binotatus Harr. Newark (Soc) ; Paterson VI, 27, Delair VII, 16 (Coll); 

 Ocean Co. (Rob). 



