1910.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 637 



9, 1904, and is labelled "edge of marsh." No doubt this is the form 

 recorded by Brimley as S. furcifcra, 16 which latter might readily be 

 mistaken for this species, although its range is entirely southwestern 

 and Mexican. 



The previous records of cuneata are Alabama (type locality), Thomas- 

 ville, Ga,, and Pablo Beach and Miami, Fla. It is apparently a purely 

 Lower Austral form. 



Amblycorypha oblongifolia (DeGeer). 



A single male taken at New Berne, August 24, and another individual 

 of the same sex taken at Bayville, Va., August 19, represent this 

 species. At the former locality the species was taken in high weeds 

 along a wet drain and at the latter it was secured in mixed woods 

 undergrowth. These records are the first from either State. 

 Amblycorypha rotundifolia cSeudder). 



This interesting species is represented by two specimens taken at 

 high elevations, one, a female, from 6,000 feet on Jones's Knob. Balsam 

 Mountains, October 7, 1905, the other, a male, from 5,740 feet on Mt. 

 Pisgah, Pisgah Ridge, October 1, 1904. These individuals show no 

 points of difference from Indiana specimens. The specimen from Mt. 

 Pisgah was beaten from the low bushes growing on the summit bald, 

 while the individual from Jones's Knob was found in the forest under- 

 growth. 



Aside from one record from Georgia, these are the only positive 

 records of the species from the South Atlantic States. 



Amblycorypha uhleri St41. 



Three males taken at Raleigh, August 20-September 4, 1904, in 

 pine woods and at light, and a single male secured at Winter Park, 

 August 26, 1908, in wire grass in pine woods, represent this austral 

 species. The Winter Park specimen has a somewhat larger tympanum 

 than the other specimens and the pronotum is also relatively broader 

 caudo-dorsad, but it is not separable from other specimens of the 

 species examined. The same individual is yellowish in coloration 

 instead of green, the color being extremely protective in the dry wire 

 grass. The two localities given above are the only ones in the State 

 from which the species has been recorded, Brimley having already 

 recorded it from the first-mentioned. 

 Microcentrum rhombifolium (Saussure). 



A single female from Raleigh, taken August 25, 1904, and an indi- 



" Ent. News, XIX, p. 19. 



