THE INSECTS OF NEW JERSEY. 179 



TETTIGIDEA Scudd. 



T. parvipennis Harr. From all points south of the Piedmont Plain, in 

 every month from March to October. It is reported by all contribu- 

 tors, the only northern records being Great Notch V, Palisades VIII, 

 and Staten Island IV-VII and X (Ds). Mr. Rehn says that "the range 

 of this species overlaps that of the next (lateralis) of which it appears 

 to be a northern representative." The "polymorpha" Burm. of the 

 last edition referred to this species. 



T. lateralis Say. Covers the same territory as the preceding, but the 

 records are not so numerous and there are none north of Staten 

 Island. 



T. pennata Morse. Greenwood Lake V, Newfoundland V, Staten Island 

 IV-VI, IX, Lakehurst V, VI (Ds) ; Chester III, Newark III, Princeton 

 III, Lahaway V, IX, Anglesea V, IX (Coll). 



T. acuta Morse. Staten Island IV (Ds). 



T. armata form depressa Morse. "New Jersey" (PAS) fide Rehn. 



T. davisi Morse. Staten Island IV, VI, VIII, Perth Amboy V, 31, James- 

 burg VIII, 31 (Ds). 



T. prorsa Scudd. Beach Haven, spring (Long); not previously known 

 north of Georgia. Ends the series of grouse-locusts. 



TRUXALIS Fabr. 



T. brevicornis Johann. Jamesburg VII, 4 ( Jn) ; Delair IX, Anglesea IX 

 (Coll); Lucaston IX (Dke) ; Cold Spring IX (Long); West Creek 

 IX (Rehn); Almonessen IX (W) ; Dennisville IX (Ds). Is an in- 

 habitant of both fresh and salt marsh areas, but more abundant in 

 the latter. 



MERMIRA Stal. 



M. vigilans Scudd. Anglesea, Cape May, Ocean City in September; re- 

 corded by several collectors and sometimes common. Mr. Rehn says 

 that this name must replace "bivittata" Serv., which represents a 

 species that does not occur in New Jersey. 



SYRBULA Stal. 



S. admirabilis Uhl. Throughout the pine barrens, especially at the edge 

 of the maritime, extending a little into the Delaware Valley region, 

 VIII-X. "A species found in low scrubby growth such as in over- 

 grown clearings and occasionally on cranberry bogs." 



ERITETTIX Bruner. 



E. carinatus Scudd. "No evidence yet of its occurrence, but no doubt 

 will be found from the red shale belt north" (Rehn). Mr. Rehn does 

 not believe that "Amblytropidia occidentalis" Sauss. will occur in 

 New Jersey. He says that it is restricted to the Georgia pine regions 



