316 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [May, 



Parorphula pallidinota Bruner. 



1900. P[arorphila] pallidinota Bruner, Sec. Rep. Merch. Locust Invest. 

 Comm. Buenos Aires, p. 26. [Carcarana, Argentina.] 



Caucete, Prov. of San Juan. Elev. 567 meters. January 13, 

 1909. One male, two females. 



Beunos Aires. May 3, 1907. One female. 



This species has previously been recorded only from Carcarana. 

 There is considerable variation in coloration, several shades of 

 yellowish brown and pale brown being the dorsal color, this dis- 

 tinctly paler than the lateral color in all but one specimen. The 

 latter has the dorsal region lineate and finely speckled with the 

 overlying brown of the lateral color. One specimen has the marginal 

 field of the tegmina greenish. 



*Sisaiitum gracilicorne (Bruner). 



1910. Orphula gracilicornis Bruner, Entom. News, XXI, p. 301. [Puerto 

 Bertoni, Paraguay.] 



Misiones. March 15 and May 1, 1909. Two males. 

 These specimens have been compared with two topotypic females 

 previously recorded by us.-^ 



Orphulella punctata (DeGeer). 



1773. Acrydium pundalum DeGeer, Mem. I'Hist. Ins., Ill, p. 503, pi. 42, 

 fig. 12. [Surinam.] 



Misiones. March 24, 1909; April 4 and 30, 1910; August 4, 1909; 

 September 1, 1909; December 12 and 14, 1910. (Nos. 10 and 25.) 

 Eight males, eleven females. 



San Juan, Prov. of San Juan. Elev. 673 meters. January 14-20, 

 1909. One male. 



Caucete, Prov. of San Juan. Elev. 567 meters. January 13, 1909. 

 One male. 



Pedregal, Prov. of Mendoza. Elev. 696 meters. September 

 20-22, 1906; December 1-18, 1906. Five males, one female. 



A careful examination of this series and that already contained 

 in the Academy collection, convinces us that our former position 

 regarding the synonymy of elegans and intricata with this species^* 

 is correct. Bruner in his last table of species of the genus^^ gives 

 full specific rank to these "forms." The San Juan, Caucete and 

 Pedregal material would under his arrangement be referred to his 

 new elongata, based on a single female from Corumbd, Brazil. 



23 Entom. News, XXII, p. 250. 



^ Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1906, pp. 27, 28. 



25 Ann. Carneg. Mus., VIII, pp. 10-12. 



