1 90 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



C. brevipenne Scudd. Occurs with the preceding, quite as common and 

 more widely distributed; extends north to Hopatcong (Ds) and is 

 recorded throughout the Delaware Valley region. Also occurs on 

 cranberry bogs. 



C. ensiferus Scudd. Staten Island VIII; may be a large form of "brevi- 

 penne" (Ds). 



C. saltans Scudd. Riverton IX, 8 (Vk) ; Atsion X (Hebard); Browns 

 Mills Jn. X (Dke). 



C. strictum Scudd. Staten Island IX, X (Ds) ; Taunton IX (Stone); 

 Atsion X (Hebard). 



C. nemorale Scudd. Along the eastern slope of the Palisades VIII, IX 

 (Bt). 



ATLANTICUS Scudd. 



A. dorsalis Burm. Greenwood Lake, Ft. Lee (Bt); Staten Island VIII- 

 X, Dennisville IX, Tuckerton VIII (Ds) ; Lahaway IX, X (Coll) ; Lake- 

 hurst VII-IX (div); Browns Mills Jn. X (Dke). 



A. pachymerus Burm. Greenwood Lake, Ft. Lee (Bt) ; Newfoundland 

 VII, Staten Island VI, IX, Woodbridge (Ds); Staffords Forge VIII 

 (Holman). 



CAMPTONOTUS Uhler. 



C. carolinensis Gerst. Riverton (Jn) ; Point Pleasant (Brown). 



CEUTHOPHILUS Scudd. 



C. gracilipes Hald. In dark cellars and barns, under stones and in hol- 

 low trees (Bt). All the species of this genus are wingless and rare, 

 occurring in single examples only. Boonton VII, 23 (GG) ; Little 

 Falls (Dke). 



C. heros Scudd. Chester (Coll). 



C. lapidicolus Scudd. Caldwell (Cr) ; New Jersey (Ss) ; a specimen 

 without definite label is in the collection. 



C. uhleri Scudd. Ft. Lee (Bt) ; Staten Island IX (Ds). 



C. neglectus Scudd. Ft. Lee (Bt). 



C. maculatus Harr. Morris Plains (Jn); Ft. Lee (Bt) ; "New Jersey" 

 (Ss). C. grandis Scudd., terrestris Scudd., blatchleyi Scudd. and 

 latens Scudd. have not yet been taken, and are better omitted from 

 the list, although their occurrence is highly probable. 



Family GRYLLID^E. 



The "crickets," as the members of this family are popularly termed, 

 are distinguished by the somewhat flattened form, the fore-wings lying 

 flat on the back but bent down so as to cover also the sides. In the 

 males the flattened surface of the wing-covers is modified into a stridu- 

 lating organ with strong veins and glassy transparent cells. In the female 



