THE INSECTS OF NEW JERSEY. 821 



Five-Mile Beach, Cape May County. Includes Anglesea at the north. 

 Wildwood and Holly Beach at the south. On the shore strip, an 

 island varying from one-quarter to three-quarters of a mile in width, 

 with a backbone of Delaware Valley formation and a fringe of 

 holly, beach plum and marine flora. There is every range from oak 

 to pine and from salt marsh to cedar, and Sphagnum swamp. The 

 flora is varied and the insect fauna correspondingly rich. Improve- 

 ments, filling and draining, are rapidly destroying the characteristic 

 fauna. Has been one of the most prolific collecting grounds in the 

 State. 



Flatbush, Long Island; several times cited for species whose occurrence 

 in New Jersey is practically certain. 



Florence, Burlington County; Delaware Valley. Fertile rolling country 

 along the Delaware River. 



Formosa Bog, Cape May County; Pine Barrens. Three miles south of 

 Tuckahoe, on a branch of the Cedar Swamp Creek. 



Forest Hill, Essex County: Piedmont Plain. On the Second River, just 

 north of Newark. Hemlocks with a sprinkling of oak, chestnut and 

 beech. 



Fort Lee, Bergen County: Highlands. Means usually the base or wooded 

 slopes of the Palisades at that point. The country is rough and 

 stony, the forests are deciduous. 



Fort Lee District; Highlands. Means usually the Palisades from Gut- 

 tenberg northward to Coytesville. 



Franklin Furnace, Sussex County. On the border between the Highlands 

 and the Appalachian region. Rough, stony country with deciduous 

 woodland and clear streams. 



Freehold, Monmouth County: Delaware Valley. A rich, well cultivated 

 country; some deciduous and coniferous woodland to the west. 



Frenchtown, Hunterdon County: Piedmont Plain. On the Delaware River, 

 the land rising to> elevations of 400 feet within a mile or two east. 



Garrett Mt., Passaic County; Highlands. The northeastern end of the 

 First Watchung Mountain, covered with deciduous and some hem- 

 lock forest. 



G. D. Generally distributed: means that the species has been found in 

 so many places and so often that the conclusion is fair that it 

 occurs wherever the food conditions are favorable. Cited by a 

 Philadelphia man it means the lines between Camden and Atlantic 

 City or those between Camden and Cape May. Cited by a Newark 

 man it is equivalent to "Newark district." To a New York collector 

 it means the range between Greenville and Fort Lee. Cited by me 

 it means the State at large. 



Gibbs Hill Pond, Salem County: Pine Barrens. Four and one-half miles 

 southwest of Alloway, in scrub land. Elevation twenty-two feet. 



Glassboro, Gloucester County: Pine Barrens. In the pine district, with 

 scrub oak fields and small swamps, interspersed. 



Glen Ridge, Essex County; Highlands. Between Montclair and Bloom- 

 field, and like them in character. 



