REHN AND HEBARD 77 



Two miles N. of Bone Spring, Brewster County, Texas, September 9,1912, 

 (R. &H.), 3c^. 



Dog Caiion, Brewster County, Texas, September 3, 1912, ( R. & II.), 2(f, 

 19. 



Neville Spring, Brewster Countv, Texas, September 8, 1912, (R. &H.), 



Franklin Mountains, El Paso, Texas, elevation 3800 feet, September 16, 

 1912, (H.), 4cf, 19. 



El Paso, Texas, elevation, 3700 feet, September 16, 1912, (H.), 30^, 39, 

 19n. 



Pueblo, Colorado, elevation 4660 feet, September 15, 1898, la'', [Hebard 

 Collection]. 



Mesilla, New Mexico, elevation 3865 feet, .June 30, 1897, (Morse), 1 9 . 

 Type. [Scudder Collection] 



Las Graces, New Mexico, elevation 3883 feet, September 27, October, 

 (Cockerell), lcf,29. Allotype and parafypes. fU. S. N. M. and Scudder 

 Collection] 



Deming, New Mexico, elevation 4315 feet, July 20, 1907, (R. it H.), 2 9 . 



Benson, Arizona, elevation 3576 feet, July, 19, [Bklyn. Inst. A. & S.]. 



San Bernardino Ranch, Cochise County, Arizona, elevation 2500 feet, 

 August, (Snow), 1 9 , [Univ. Kansas]. 



Huachuca Mountains, Arizona, August 15, 1903, (Oslar), 19, [U. S. N. M.] 



Snyder '& Hill, Pima County, Arizona, elevation 2500 feet, October 11, 

 1910, (R. & H.), 7cf . 



Sycamore Canon, Baboquivari Mountains, Arizona, elevation 3700 feet, 



October to 9, 1910, (R. & H.), 1 9 . 



Hot Springs, Arizona, elevation 1697 feet, (H. S. Barber), Id", [U. S. N. M.j 



Phoenix, Arizona, ""^ elevation 1082 feet, September 5, 6, October 15, 

 (Kunze), 9cf , 11 9 , [Hebard Collection and U. S. N. M.J. 



Florence, Arizona, elevation 1493 feet," June 8, 14, July 13, 20, 23, Septem- 

 ber 20, 1903, (Biederman), Id", 59, 2d^n., 2 9n., [A. N. S. P.]. 



Tlahualilo, Durango, Mexico, elevation 3500 feet, July, 1905, (A. W. 

 Morrill), Icf, [U. S. N. M.]. 



Insara elegans consuetipes (Scudder) (Figs. 13, 19 and 26.) 

 1900. Areihaea comuelipcK Scudder, Can. Ent., XXXII, p. 332. [Indio, 

 California.] 



This geographic race of /. elegans might easily be considered a 

 distinct species so striking are the characters which separate it from 

 that species, were it not for the fact that a series of specimens from 



" The majority of these specimens are intermediates between I. elegans 

 and /. elegans cohsuelipes, while a number are tj'pical of elegans and a few 

 approach the western geographic race closely. 



••^ Of these specimens two of the adults and the four nymphs were taken 

 in June. 



TRANS. AM. ENT. SOC XL. 



