JAMES A. G. REHN AND MORGAN HEBARD 307 



Hot Springs, New Mexico, 7000 feet, 2 9, [Hebard Cln.]. 



Jemez Hot Springs, New Mexico, VIII, 6, 1911, (J. Woodgate), 1 9 n.; 

 IX, 23, 30, 1912, (J. Woodgate), 1 d^, 1 9, [Hebard Cln.]. 



Beulah, New Mexico, VIII, 17, (H. Skinner), 1 cf , [A. N. S. P.]. 



Glenwood Springs, Colorado, IX, 9, 1909, 6000 feet, (R. & H.; in low 

 herbage under junipers on mountain slopes), 1 cT. 



Denver, Colorado, (Beale), 1 d', [Hebard Cln.]. 



Fort Collins, Colorado, VIII, 1898, 1 9, 1 9 n., [U. S. N. M.]. 



Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona, VIII, 10, 1907, 8000 feet. (J. L. Webb), 

 1 9, [U. S. N. M.]. 



Huachuca Mountains, Arizona, VIII, 18, 1903, (Oslar), 1 9 , [U. S. N. M.]. 



Sycamore Canyon, Baboquivari Mountains, Arizona, X, 6 to 9, 1910, 

 4700 feet, (R. & H.; in grasses on hillsides), 2 d', I 9 . 



Grand Canyon of the Colorado, Arizona, VII, 11, 1892, 1 9, [Hebard 

 Cln.]. 



Caliente, Nevada, IX, 3, 1909, 4600 feet, (R. & H.; on mountain side 

 covered with scattered growth of sage and other bushes), 1 9 . 



Los Angeles, California, 1 d, [Hebard Cln.]. 



Scudderia paronae Griflini 



1896. Scuddcrid paronae Griffini, Boll. Mus. Zool. Univ. Torino, xi. No. 

 232, p. 11. [Colon, Panama.] 



1897. Scudderia curvicauda Saussure and Pictet (not Locusta curvi- 

 cauda DeGeer, 1773), Biol. Cent.-Amer., Orth., i, p. 331, pi. xv, fig. 20. 

 [Orizaba and Atoyac, Vera Cruz, Mexico; Teapa, Tabasco, Mexico.] 



1898. Scudderia mexicana Scudder, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci., 

 xxxiii, p. 280. (In part.) [Orizaba, Mexico.] 



1898. Scudderia furcifcra Scudder, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci., 

 xxxiii, p. 283. (In part.) [Tepic, Mexico.] 



Scudder carelessly included the two males before him from 

 Orizaba in his series of *S. mexicana and confused his series of the 

 present insect from Tepic, Mexico, with the closely related S. J. 

 furcifera, this latter error due to the fact that he had never seen 

 typical paronae and that the material from Tepic is dried alcoholic. 



Typical paronae differs from /. furcifera in the somewhat larger 

 size, slightly more prominent eyes, and antennae which are marked 

 with broad and widely spaced pale annuli; the males have very 

 similar genitalia but the females have a longer l)ut proportionately 

 slenderer ovipositor. 



Allotype here selected: 9 ; Ancon, Canal Zone Panama. 

 November 16, 1913. (M. Hebard.) [Hebard Collection.] 



Description of Allotype. — Similar to the male type as described by Grif- 

 fini, the following characters being worthy of emphasis. Antennae at base 

 of the general green coloration for a distance of nearly 4 mm., distad paler, 



TRANS. AM. ENT. SOC, XL. 



