April, '07] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 141 



9. C. nigribimbo Whitney. 



About the end of June till September, all through the pine 

 barrens. 



10. C. plangens Wiedemann. 



This species is common along salt marshes. Anglesea, May 

 28th, Newark meadows, June, A. J. Weidt. Staten Island, 

 June 3-10, Wm. T. Davis. 



11. C. fallax Osten Sacken. 



Locally common. Wenonah, June 22; Jamesburg, July 4th. 



12. C. moechns Osten Sacken. 



I have never seen this species in numbers, but Mr. Har- 



beck records it to be the most common species near Trenton 

 about the first week in July. 



13. C. univittatus Macquart. 



Locally a pest along the edges of woods. My extreme data 

 are from Wenonah, June I4th to July I5th. 



14. C. bistellatus Daecke. 



This species I have only taken so far at its type locality. 

 Brown's Mills Jc., from end of June to middle of July. 



15. C. Indus Osten Sacken. 



Rare in New Jersey. I have only taken it at Clementon, 

 from which locality it has been previously recorded by Mr. 

 Johnson and Mr. Harbeck, May 10 to 15. Mr. Wenzel has 

 taken one specimen at Almonessen, May 2Oth. 



16. C. vittatus Wiedemann. 



A widely distributed and rather common species. Brown's 

 Mills Jc., June 24th ; Wenonah, July 27th ; Lucaston, Aug. 

 6th; Bamber, Sept. ist. 



17. C. striatus Osten Sacken. 



This species is rare in New Jersey, and in local collections 

 it is not uncommon to find sequa.v and hinei (a new species de- 

 scribed in this paper) under the name of striatus. Delair, 

 Aug. 7th. 



18. C. sequax Williston. 



The New Jersey specimens have a yellowish frontal callus, 

 margined with black ; the types from western Kansas are de- 

 scribed as having a black frontal callosity. There is no other 

 perceptible difference. Wenonah, July 27th. 



