1910.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. i 



carina of the pronotum lower and more uniform in elevation than in 

 the majority of specimens from the United States. 

 Scnistoceroa americana (Drury). 

 Caudell (p. 330) has recorded this species from Bermuda. 



Paroxya bermudensis Rehn. 



1909. Paroxya bermudensis Rehn, Ent. News, XX, p. 343. [Warwick 

 Parish, Bermuda.] 



The full data for this most interesting species are given in the 

 original description. It is apparently a form which matures late 

 in the fall and in early winter, as search in March, April and May in 

 the section where the types were taken on January 15 revealed only 

 immature individuals. 



TETTIGONID^3. 

 Neoconocephalus triops (Linnaeus). 



Verrill (p. 821) has recorded this species as Conocephalus dissimilis 

 on Henshaw's authority. 

 Neoconocephalus maxillosus (Fabricius). 



This Antillean species is represented in the present series by a 

 single male and two females taken in Paget West, December-January 

 and summer of 1909, and at Walsingham, February 16. 



These specimens are smaller than Redtenbacher's measurements 

 of the species, but otherwise no differences exist. The male Paget 

 West individual measures as follows : 



Length of body 24.0 mm. 



Length of fastigium 1.2 



Length of pronotum 7.5 



Length of tegmen 30.5 " 



Length of caudal femur 18.0 



This is the first record of the species from Bermuda. 



Neoconocephalus fusco-striatus "(Redtenbacher). 



Scudder (p. 43) has recorded this species, and a pair taken in Paget 

 West, December to January, are before us. According to the accom- 

 panying notes the species is not common at that season. 

 Orchelimum vulgare Harris. 



Uhler (p. 158) has recorded this species on the basis of a badly 

 broken female individual. 



Conocephalus fasciatus (DeGeer). (Xiphidium fasciatum Auct.) 



One male and three females of this species taken in Paget West 

 are in the present series. This is the first record of the species from 

 Bermuda, where it is said to be locally abundant. 



