Vol. xxiii] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 



the inferior abdominal appendage of the male on the eyes of 

 the female. The speaker said these scratches could be seen 

 on the eyes of our common Anax junius. 



Mr. Wenzel said in Macrodactylus the pubescence on the 

 abdominal segments of the female is rubbed off by the male 

 if copulation has taken place. 



Mr. H. A. Wenzel read an interesting account of his 

 recent trip to the Great Bend of the Rio Grande in southern 

 Texas. 



Mr. Rehn spoke of the difficulties of desert collecting, the 

 conditions in the mountains being far less trying. 



Dr. Skinner exhibited specimens of Adelpha bredowi and 

 californica and gave characters to separate the two. 



Mr. H. W. Wenzel compared the faunas of the Huachuca 

 Mts. in Arizona and Southern Texas, and said that so far 

 as the Coleoptera were concerned there was very little sim- 

 ilarity. He mentioned the different families, genera and 

 species that bore out his conclusion. 



Mr. Rehn made some remarks on a recent Orthoptera- 

 collecting trip made with Mr. Morgan Hebard through the 

 greater portion of the coastal plain of the southeastern 

 States. The time spent in the field covered from Aug. 24th 

 to Sept. loth. The chief object of the work was to secure 

 information concerning the northern limits of numerous 

 Austroriparian species and twenty localities extending from 

 Northern Florida to Southeastern North Carolina were ex- 

 amined. A series of fifty-five hundred Orthoptera and much 

 valuable field information on the same were secured. A num- 

 ber of species taken were little known and some are without 

 doubt new. 



Dr. Skinner mentioned the immense flight of Alctia argil- 

 lacca that had taken place in Philadelphia during the week. 

 Mr. Haimbach exhibited specimens which, when he had 

 mounted them, seemed dry and brittle. This was not the 

 case with some other species he had taken at light at the 

 same time, among which was Feltia gladiaria. He also spoke 

 of a big flight of argillacea he saw in St. Louis in October 



