138 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



logs, rarely on the beach of the bay, more frequently on that of the 

 Gulf, where 12 specirrtens were taken in several hours' search on 

 March 25, beneath thick masses of seaweed along Hog Island. 

 Since californicus has never been recorded as mating or even as- 

 sociating with subterraneus, and since the latter is an inland form 

 occurring usually in or about the margins of cultivated grounds, 

 the two, in my opinion, are distinct and separate species. 



Tetragonoderus fasciatus Hald. — Among a number of 

 beetles taken by my son and his wife at electric light on the porch 

 of my residence at Dunedin, in June and July, 1915, was a single 

 one of this species. It is not included in Leng's "List of the 

 Carabidae of Florida,"* he merely stating that one had been taken 

 in Mobile County, Alabama, by Loding. It is frequent in sandy 

 places in Indiana, and Horn gives its range as Michigan and New 

 York to Louisiana and Lower California. 



Lebia pulchella Dej. — Single specimens of this handsome 

 Carabid were taken beneath boards along the margins of ponds 

 on Jan. 16 and April 4. Schwarz has taken it at Ft. Capron and 

 Tampa, but it is rare wherever found. 



Agonoderus indistinctus Dej .^Single specimens were taken 

 at DuAedin, March 28 and Sanford, March 24. Not included in 

 Leng's list. 



Haliplus punctatus Aube. — A single example of what I take 

 to be this species, judging from the translation given by Roberts f 

 of Aube's original description, was taken Jan. 30 from a pond in 

 an old clay pit. It is not any one of the species described by 

 Matheson,** and so was sent to t;hat gentleman for examination. 

 He pronounced it a new species, but as he and Roberts disagreed 

 as to what the H. punctatus of Aube really is, I place it under that 

 name provisionally. 



Peltodytes oppositus Roberts. — Several specimens were 

 taken from ponds and ditches between Feb. 10 and April 2. This 

 and the preceding are the only two species of the family so far taken 

 in the vicinity of Dunedin. 



Notomicrus nanulus Lee. — This minute Dytiscid was taken 



*Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.. XXXIV. 1915, pp. 555-601. 

 tjourn. N.Y. Ent. Soc, XXI, 1913, 95. 

 **Loc. cit., XX, 1912, 156-193. 



