300 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [May, 



Family PHASMIDiB. 

 Subfamily PYGIRHYNCHIN^. 

 * Canuleius ^^ inermis Redtenbacher. 



1906. C[amdeius] inermis Redtenbacher, Die Insekt. Fam. Phasmiden, 

 p. 68, pi. II, figs. 1, 2. [Theresopolis and Espirito Santo, Brazil.] 



Misiones. November 2, 1910. One female. 

 This specimen is considerably damaged, so that the characters of 

 the caudal limbs cannot be verified. 



Subfamily ANISOMORPHIN.E. 

 Agathemera millepunctata Redtenbacher. 



1906. A[gathemera] millepunctata Redtenbacher, ibid., p. 89, [Carmen de 

 Patagones, Prov. of Buenos Aires, Argentina.] 



La Paz, Prov. of Mendoza. Elev. 504 meters. December 15, 

 1908. One female. 



This specimen is slightly smaller than the original measurements, 

 but otherwise it agrees fully. The species is very distinct from 

 A. crassa, with material of which from Cruz del Eje, Prov. of Cordoba, 

 the present specimen has been compared. 

 *Aiii80inorpha dentata St&l. 



1875. A[nisomorpha] dentata StS,l, Recens. Orthopt., Ill, p. 95. [Santa 

 Catharina, Brazil.] 



Misiones. January 3, 1910; November 2, 1910. Two females. 



These specimens are somewhat smaller than the measurements 

 given by Stal and Redtenbacher, but are otherwise quite typical of 

 the species. This is the first record of the species from Argentina, 

 the previous ones, in addition to the type locality, being Matto 

 Grosso, Brazil, Paraguay and Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia. 



Subfamily PSEUDOPHASMINiE. 

 *Paraphasma marginale Redtenbacher. 



1906. P[arap}iasma\ marginale Redtenbacher, Die Insekt. Fam. Phasmiden, 

 p. 115. [Santos, Minas Geraes, Rio de Janeiro, Goyaz, Brazil; Paraguay.) 



Misiones. January 5, 1911; December 5, 1909. (No. 9.) One 

 male, one female. 



These specimens agree very well with the description of the species, 

 which is the same as that recorded by the author from Sapucay, 

 Paraguay, as Olcyphides fasciatus (female) and 0. hopii (male).^^ 



15 The individual from Sapucay, Paraguay, recorded by us (Proc. Acad. Nat. 

 Sci. Phila., 1907, p. 161) as Ceroys coronatus (Thunberg) belongs to the genus 

 Canuleius, and we tentatively refer it to C. similis Redtenbacher {ibid., p. 68), 

 a very closely related form described from Theresopolis, Brazil. 



16 Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1907, p. 165. 



