122 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Mar., '17 



EXPLANATION OF PLATE X. 

 Stridulating field of the sinistral tegmen of male (x 2). 



Fig. i Stilpnochlora marginella (Serville). Cayenne. 



Fig. 2 Stilpnochlora couloniana (Saussure). Santiago, Cuba. 



Fig. 3 Stilpnochlora quadrata (Scudder). Jimenez, western Co- 

 lombia. 



Fig. 4 Stilpnochlora laurifolium (Linnaeus). Cinchona, Jamaica. 



Fig. 5 C'ncinidophyllum lincatum (Brunner). Contamano, Rio Uca- 

 yali, Peru. 

 Lateral outline of tegmen of male (x 1^2). 



Fig. 6 Stilpnochlora quadrata (Scudder). Cauca, Colombia. 



Fig. 7 Stilpnochlora couloniana (Saussure). Santiago, Cuba. 



Fig. 8 C'ncmidophylluin lincatum (Brunner). Lateral view of male. 



Contamano, Ucayali, Peru (x i%). 

 Fig. 9 CncinidopJiyllum lincatum (Brunner). Lateral view of fasti- 



gium of male. (Greatly enlarged.) a base of antennae. 

 Fig. 10 Stcirodonopis bilobata Scudder. Dorsal outline of fastigii. 



Male. (Greatly enlarged.) 

 Fig. ii Frontinus dcyccrii Stal. Dorsal outline of fastigii. Male. 



(Greatly enlarged.) 



An Aid in the Entomology of New Jersey. 



Dr. John W. Harshberger, Professor of Botany in the University of 

 Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, has just published an attractive volume, 

 "The Vegetation of the New Jersey Pine-Barrens An Ecologic In- 

 vestigation" (Philadelphia, Christopher Sower Co., 1916. 8vo., pp. xi, 

 329. 284 figs., folding map). This is, of course, essentially a botanical 

 work, which supplements Stone's "The Plants of Southern New Jersey," 

 issued in 1911 by the New Jersey State Museum, "including only that 

 which has not been mentioned by Stone, or in a very casual and un- 

 emphatic way." Although there are three pages of "Notes on a few 

 insect galls of the pine barrens," Dr. Harshberger's book will be chiefly 

 of interest to entomologists in the vegetative background which it 

 furnishes for the study of the rich insect fauna of New Jersey. 



Data on the Far Southwestern States Wanted (Lep.). 



The Entomological Department of the Southwest Museum (Los 

 Angeles, California) is engaged in the compilation of a check list of 

 diurnal Lepidoptera occurring in the Southwest. The territory in- 

 cludes Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and California. It is planned 

 particularly to secure definite data as to the exact locality of occur- 

 rence and month of greatest abundance of all the rarer and more lo- 

 calized forms, namely those which are restricted in range. 



With this list it is also planned, if possible, to include a directory of 

 Entomologists residing in the four States named. 



The Museum will appreciate data from all collectors having material 

 from the territory in question. Communicate with DR. JOHN COM- 

 STOCK, 1275 Bellevue Avenue, Los Angeles, or with the Entomological 

 Department, Southwest Museum, Avenue 46 and Marmion Way, LOS 

 Angeles, California. 



