312 STUDIES IN AMERICAN TETTIGONIIDAE (oRTHOPTERA) 



111 general coloration the series before us is uniform green, 

 many individuals have the lateral angles of the pronotum weakly 

 outlined in yellowish. 



Material from North and South Carolina has the least ovi- 

 positor width, ranging from 1.8 to 2 mm., in females from Florida 

 this width is 2.2 (Pablo Beach) and 2.3 mm. (Miami). 



The present species is known to range from Raleigh, North Caro- 

 lina, south to Miami, Florida, and west to Alabama. It has 

 been found to be a scarce but rather generally distributed species 

 in the low country below the fall line in the region defined above. 



Specimens Examined: 31 ; 15 males and 16 females. 



Fayetteville, North Carolina, IX, 9, 1911, (R. & H.; common in short- 

 leaf pine woods especially about scrub oaks) 4 cf , 10 9 . 



Wrightsville, North Carolina, IX, 7, 1911, (R. & H.), 1 d". 



Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina, IX, 8, 1911, (R. & H.), 1 d". 



Florence, South Carolina, IX, 6, 1911, (R. & H.; in raspberry and other 

 plants along "branch" in forest of gum, sweet gum, etc.), 3 cf, 4 9 . 



Sandfly, Georgia, IX, 3, 1911, (R. & H.; heavy undergrowth of gray- 

 bark pine forest), 2 cf. 



Brunswick, Georgia, VIII, 30, 1911, (H.; on palmetto flats), 1 cf . 



Billy's Island, Okeefenokee Swamp, Georgia, VI to IX, 1912-13, (J. C. 

 Bradley), 2 cf , 2 9, [Cornell Univ.]. 



Jacksonville, Florida, IX, 7, 1913, (W. T. Davis), 1 d^, [Davis Cln.]. 



Scudderia mexicana (Saussure) (PI. IX, fig. 4; pi. X, fig. 28.) 



1861. Phaneroptera mexicana Saussure, Rev. et Mag. Zool., 2e Ser., 



xiii, p. 129. [Me.xico.] 



1878. Sc[udderia] furculata Brunner, Monogr. Phaner., p. 239, fig. 72b. 



[Mexico; Texas.] 



With the exception of the very aberrant S. strigata, the present 

 insect is the most attenuate of the species of the present genus. 

 The genital characters of the male of mexicana are very distinc- 

 tive as given in the key. The species is very different from its 

 nearest allies *S. cuneata and ungulata. 



