624 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Nov., 



tended the range of the species, the most northern previous record 

 being from Denmark, S. C. The range is now known to extend from 

 Port Orange and De Funiak Springs, Fla., to New Berne, N. C. 

 The female and one of the males measure as follows : 



Length of body 10.5 mm., 12.8 mm. 



Length of pronotum 9.2 " 11 " 



Length of caudal femur 6.7 " 8 " 



Tettigidea lateralis (Pay). 



A series of eighty-two North Carolina individuals are before us, 

 this comprising the following: Winter Park, August 26, 1908, two 

 females; New Berne, August 24, 1908, two females; Raleigh, April, 

 7-July 18, 1904, twenty-one males, sixteen females; Sulphur Springs, 

 April 2-September 24. 1904, eight males, thirty females; Mt. Pisgah, 

 4,500 feet elevation, October 1, 1904, one adult male, one immature 

 male, one immature female. 



In this series the front margin of the pronotum is found to vary 

 from broadly arcuate to distinctly angulate, regardless of locality or 

 environment. The Raleigh series is overwhelmingly long-winged, 

 but one in the whole thirty-seven individuals being short-winged, 

 while in the thirty-eight Sulphur Springs specimens but two males 

 and twelve females are short-winged. Both Winter Park representa- 

 tives are long-winged, as well as the single adult from Mt. Pisgah and 

 the two specimens from New Berne. Color variations are numerous 

 and varied, and size variation is quite marked in the larger series. 



Tettigidea prorsa Scudder. 



An immature male and an adult female taken at New Berne, August 

 24, 190S, belong to this rare species. The specimens were taken in a 

 wet meadow in company with Tettigidea lateralis and Paxilla obesa. 

 Both specimens are short-winged, as is also a male individual from 

 Beach Haven, N. J., taken in the spring of 1907, the only other speci- 

 men of the species seen. 



The range of the species is now known to extend from Georgia to 

 east-central New Jersey, the only records in addition to those men- 

 tioned above being from Georgia, North Carolina and Denmark, S. C. 



Truxalis brevicornis (Johannson). 



Three pairs from Raleigh, taken August 15 to September 15 in or 

 on the edge of marsh, and an extensive series of twenty-four males 

 and five females taken September IS at Sulphur Springs represent 



