MORGAN HEBARD 1 97 



New Smyrna, Fla., Ill, 1905, (A. X. Caudell; bred adult XI, 1905), i 9, [U. S. 

 N. M.]. 



Miami, Fla., I, 2S to XI, 16, 1903 to 1916, (Hebard; for Hebard; Englehardt), 

 21 9 , 41 juv. 9 , [Hebard Cln. and A. N. S. P.]. 



Homestead, Fla., VII, 10 to 12, 1912, (Rehn and Hebard; under debris), i 9, 

 [Hebard Cln.]. 



Jew F"ish, Fla., \'II, 11, 1912, (Hebard; in cracks of sun-baked mud), I 9, [Heb- 

 ard Cln.]. 



Long Key, Fla.. Ill, 13 and 17, 1910, (Hebard; two under dry fibers at base of 

 petioles of cocoanut palm, others under debris), 5 juv. 9 , [Hebard Cln. and A. X. 

 S. P.]. 



Key West, Fla., I, 19 to VII, 7, 1904 to 1912, (Hebard; Rehn and Hebard), 8 9, 

 17 juv. 9, [Hebard Cln. and A. X. S. P.]. 



Nairn, Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, XI, 1892, (H. E. Weed), 3 9 , [Hebard Cln.]. 



San Antonio, Texas, IX, 18 to 27, (E. Palmer), 5 9,4 juv. 9 , [M. C. Z.]. 



Victoria, Tex.. \T, i, 1904, i 9 ; \TI, 10, 1907, (J. D. Mitchell), i juv. 9, [both 

 U. S. N. M.]. 



Sinton, Tex., II, 7, 191 1. (C. T. Atkinson), i juv. 9, [U. S. N. M.]. 



Brownsville, Tex., Ill, 19, 1908, (Jones and Pratt), i 9 , [U. S. N. M.]; VII, 

 (H. Wickham), i 9, [Hebard Cln.]; \TII, 5, 1912, (Hebard; on solid ground in litter 

 under rats' nests, Xeotonia sj).), 5 9 , i juv. 9 , [Hebard Cln. and A. N. S. P.]. 



PANCHLORA Burmeister 



Blatta of early authors. 



1838. Panchlora Burmeister, Handb. Ent., ii, abth. ii, pt. i, 506. 



The genus includes a large number of tropical American forms 

 which separate into several groups. 



Seven species were included with the original description, of 

 which three are now separated from this genus. 



Genotype: P[auchlora] piilcheUa Burmeister^ Panchlora qiiad- 

 ripunctata ([Blatta] qiiadripiincta) (Stoll), selected by Rehn, in 

 I903.-^" 



Generic Characters. — Pronotum convex, laterad declivent; caudal 

 margin strongly and broadly angulate produced, with apex blunt 

 and sides feebly conca\e: much as in Pycnoscelus, but with mesal 

 portion less conx'ex. Tegmina and wings fully developed in both 

 sexes, extending considerably beyond the apex of the abdomen, 

 Tegmina moderately to \'ery broad; discoidal sectors weakly 

 oblique. Wings broad ; area of irregular costal veins narrow, 

 bounded by mediastine \ein to near apex of wing; ulnar vein with 



5-- Trans. Am. Enl. Soc, xxix, \^. 284. 

 MEM. ^^\. ENT. SOC, 2. 



