278 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 



Scudderia curvicauda Scudd. ! (pars) [nee De Geer] Bost. Journ. Nat. 



Hist., VII., 448 (1862). 

 Scudderia furculata Blatchl. ! [nee Brunu.], Proe, Ind. Aead, Sc., 1892, 



100-101 (1894). 



Halifax, Nova Seotia, Piers (S. H. S.). Winnipeg, Manitoba, Kenni- 

 cott (S. H. S.), Scudder (M. C. Z.). Moosehead Lake (S. H. S.) ; Mt. 

 Desert Is. (S. H. S.) ; and Norway, Smith (M. C. Z., Morse), and 

 Bethel, Edmands (M. C. Z.), Oxford Co., Me. New Hampshire (t. 

 Brunner) ; White Mts., valleys and subalpine (S. H. S.) ; and Frauconia, 

 Slosson (S. H. S.) and Bethlehem, Agassiz (M. C. Z.), Grafton Co., 

 N. H, Mass. (S. H. S.) ; Adams, Berkshire Co. (Morse) ; Newton, 

 Middlesex Co., Henshaw (M. C. Z.) ; Wollaston and Walpole, Norfolk 

 Co. (Sprague) ; and Provincetown, Barnstable Co. (Morse), Mass. Cha- 

 teaugay Lake, Adirondacks, Bowditch (S. H. S.) and Ithaca, Tompkins 

 Co. (Morse), N. Y. New Jersey (t. Smith). Michigan, Miles (S. H. S.). 

 Marshall, Fulton, Vigo and Putnam Co., Ind. (Blatchley). Southern 

 Illinois, Thomas (S. H. S.). Iowa (t. Osborn, Ball). Nebraska, Dodge 

 (S. H. S.), and West Point, Cuming Co. Bruner, (S. H. S.), Nebr., Bis- 

 marck, Burleigh Co., N. Dak. (Bruner). Georgia (t. Saussure-Pictet). 



This is a northern species, and the last reference above is surprising, 

 the most southerly stations otherwise known being Southern Illinois and 

 Central Indiana. 



3. Scudderia curvicauda. Fig. 3. 



Locusta curvicauda De Geer ! , Mem., III., 446, pi. 38, fig. 3 (1773). 

 Gryllus {Tettigonia) curvicaudus Goeze, Ent. Beytr., II., 98 (1778). 

 Phaneroptera angustifolia Harr. !, Ins. Inj. Veg., 129 (1841). 

 Phaneroptera curvicauda Scudd. ! (pars *), Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist., VII., 



448 (1862). 

 Scudderia curvicauda Stal, Ofv. k. Vet.-Akad. Forh., XXX., 41 (1873). 

 « « Brunn., Mon. Phaneropt., 240 (1878). 



" « Sauss.-Pict., Biol. Centr. Amer., Orth., 328, 329, 



331-332, pi. 15, fig. 20 (1897). 

 Scudderia furculata Beut. ! [nee Brunn.], Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 



VI., 275 (1894). 



* Specimens in my collection and in that of the Museum of Comparative 

 Zoology used by me in 18G2, as well as my own words at the time, show that I did 

 not then distinguish between tliis species and S. pisti/lata ; and, as specimens then 

 sent to Brunner further show, neither did I distinguish S. septentrionalis. I have 

 accordingly quoted this reference under each of these species. 



