192 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



N. affinis Beut. Occurs with "fasciatus" from late July until frost (Bt). 



N. carolinus Scudd. Mahwah X, Ft. Lee VIII, Cranford VIII, Brookside 

 VIII, Staten Island VIII-XI, Lakehurst VIII-X (Ds); Jamesburg X 

 (Coll); Atsion X, Stafford's Forge IX (Hebard); West Creek IX 

 (Rehn). 



N. canus Scudd. Simmer X, 15, Whitings IX, 28 (Long). 



N. palustris Blatchley. Lake Hopatcong VIII, Lakehurst IX (Ds) ; Staf- 

 ford's Forge IX (Hebard). 



N. janus Kirby. National Park X (Dke). 



N. maculatus Blatchley. Mt. Pleasant IX, 7, in oak-pine woods (H. Fox). 



GRYLLUS Linn. 



G. luctuosus Serv. (abbreviatus Serv.) Occurs throughout the State in 

 late summer and fall, and perhaps our most common field cricket. 

 Some adults winter and are found again in May. The name "abbre- 

 viatus" refers to the short-winged form. Occurs on salt marshes and 

 upland fields and one of the common species on cranberry bogs. 



G. pennsylvanicus Burm. As widely distributed as the preceding, but 

 much less abundant. Records come from all faunal regions in late 

 fall and early spring. 



G. neglectus Scudd. Caldwell (Cr) ; New Jersey (Bt) ; Ocean Co., on 

 cranberry bogs (Sm). May be a variety of the preceding a point 

 on which the authorities are not agreed. 



G. domesticus Linn. New Brunswick V (Gr) ; the "cricket on the hearth" 

 or house cricket; introduced from Europe.- 



MIOGRYLLUS Sauss. 



M. saussurei Scudd. Staten Island V, Lakehurst VI-VII (Ds). Matures 

 in June. 



CECANTHUS Serv. 



CE. angustipennis Fitch. Ft. Lee IX, Staten Island IX, X (Ds); New 

 Brunswick VIII (Coll); common throughout the pine barrens and ex- 

 tends into the Delaware Valley region Riverton VIII, IX (Jn). 



CE. exclamationis Davis. Cranford VIII, Staten Island VIII, IX, Morgan 

 X, Manasquan IX, Farmingdale VIII (Ds) ; Riverton IX, 10 (Rehn); 

 Clementon VIII, 13 (Vk). 



CE. niveus De G. The "snowy tree-cricket." All the species of this genus 

 are tree crickets and lay their eggs in twigs, sometimes causing 

 injury, but not all species lay them in close series, nor do they 

 equally produce injury. Boonton IX (GG); Ft. Lee IX, Staten Island 

 VIII, IX, Lakehurst, in village gardens only (Ds) ; Jamesburg, Angle- 

 sea (Coll); Riverton VIII, Glassboro (Jn). 



CE. latipennis Riley. Staten Island VIII-X; Jamesburg IX, Farmingdale 

 VIII, Lakehurst VIII, IX, common (Ds) ; Riverton VIII (Jn) ; Delair 

 VIII, Lucaston IX (Dke); Medford VIII, Stafford's Forge IX (Rehn). 



