628 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Nov., 



Dichromorpha viridis (Scudder). 



A single male of this species was taken in a wet spot in woods at 

 Bayville, Va., August 19, and two males from Raleigh, taken July 18 

 and 20, on low ground are in the collection. 



Morse has recorded the species from Norfolk, Ya., and Greensboro, 

 Salisbury and Raleigh, N, C. 

 Clinocephalus elegans Morse. 



In a wet meadow at New Berne, on August 24, and in wet spots 

 with tall grass in pine woods at Winter Park, August 26, this species 

 was found quite numerous, a series of four males, ten females and two 

 immature individuals being taken at the former locality and five males 

 and nine females at the latter. 



When compared with typical New Jersey specimens of C. elegans 

 and Florida specimens of typical and nearly typical C. e. pulcher the 

 North Carolina individuals are seen to be nearly intermediate, although 

 a shade nearer true elegans. The peculiar coloration found in some 

 individuals of C. e. pulcher is intimated in several specimens from 

 Winter Park, but these lack the extreme development in this line 

 occasionally found in the more southern form. The size is decidedly 

 larger than the average of typical elegans, but in the male sex pulcher 

 is distinctly larger than the North Carolina specimens of that sex. 



The measurements of a pan from Winter Park are as follows: 



Length of body 18 mm., 23.5 mm. 



Length of pronotum 4 " 4.6 " 



Length of tegmen 9.2 " 12 



Length of caudal femur 10.8 " 13.8 " 



Chloealtis conspersa Harris. 



A pair of this boreal species was taken by the junior author, a male 

 from an elevation of 4,500 feet on Mt. Pisgah, October 1, 1904. and a 

 female from the summit of Jones's Knob, Balsam Mountains, 6,200 

 feet elevation, October 7, 1905. Morse has recorded this species from 

 Jones's Peak (Jones's Knob) and Steestachee Bald in the Balsam 

 Mountains, at elevations of from 5,500 to 6,000 feet. These constitute 

 the only records for the species in North Carolina. 



Both specimens here recorded were taken amid the undergrowth of 

 deciduous forests. 



Chorthippus ourtipennis (Harris). 



Three males and four females of this species were secured at the 

 summit of Mt. Pisgah, elevation 5,740 feet, on October 1, 1904, where 



