824 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



Hunterdon County: Piedmont Plain and Highlands. A rolling or hilly, 

 sometimes rocky country, fairly well watered, with deciduous wood- 

 land and occasional groves of coniferous trees: rarely cited. 



Husted, Cumberland County: Delaware Valley. Five miles north of 

 Bridgeton at the edge of the Pine Barrens. Good farming country and 

 quite generally under cultivation to the east. 



Indian Creek, Atlantic County: Pine Barrens. About four miles north of 

 Egg Harbor City, in pine and scrub land. 



lona, Cumberland County: Pine Barrens. Seven miles south of Glassboro 

 and in the same general region. 



Irvington, Essex County: Piedmont Plain. On the rising ground south- 

 west of Newark, country mostly under cultivation. 



Jamesburg, Monmouth County: Pine Barrens at the edge of the Delaware 

 Valley formation. The collecting ground is on the line of the rail- 

 road to Old Bridge, around a series of cranberry bogs covering about 

 ICO acres. There are groves of conifers as well as deciduous trees 

 and much swamp land above and below the bogs. Ditches of con- 

 siderable size regulate the water supply for the bogs. This is a meet- 

 ing ground for the entomologists of New York, Newark and Phila- 

 delphia, so most of the contributors to the list include species from 

 Jamesburg. 



Jersey City Heights, Hudson County: Delaware Valley. Refers to the 

 west slope of the ridge back of Jersey City and Hoboken, extending 

 down to the meadows. 



Kirkwood, Cam den County: Delaware Valley. Pour miles southeast of 

 Hadclonfield, on Cooper's Creek, with a considerable pond close by. 

 At the edge of the scrub land. 



Lacy, Ocean County: Pine Barrens. On the line of the Tuckerton Rail- 

 road about two miles southwest of Baniber. 



Lahaway, Ocean County: Delaware Valley Island in the Pine Barrens. At 

 the head of Lahaway Creek. The collecting ground is a basin, some 

 thirty acres of which is in cranberries, ground rising on three sides. 

 Surface soil sandy, mixed with clay. Pines on all sides, many 

 deciduous trees. Huckleberry swamp partly edging bogs, in which 

 are many magnolias. Flora very rich. Have taken a very large num- 

 ber of species of all orders, and many more have been taken by my 

 good friend J. Turner Brakeley. 



Lakehurst, Ocean County: Pine Barrens. Eight miles southwest of Lake- 

 wood, somewhat rolling, without great elevations. Much swamp land, 

 some of it in cranberry bogs. Scrub oaks and pines predominate and 

 the soil is mostly sandy. Has become a favorite collecting ground of 

 late years, the remarkably rich flora being associated with an equally 

 rich entomological fauna. Formerly known as Manchester. 



Lakewood, Ocean County: Pine Barrens. In the pine district, but with 

 more old open forest and less scrub land than usual. The ordinary 



