326 STUDIES IN AMERICAN TETTIGONIIDAE (oRTHOPTERA) 



Swainton, New Jersey, VIII, 21, 1914, (H.; in marshy meadow), 1 cf . 



Wildwood Junction, New Jersey, VII, 27, VIII, 8, 1914, (H.; huckleberry 

 bushes in oak woods), 4 cf , 2 9 . 



Dias Creek, New Jersey, VII, 20, 27, 1914, (H.; in deciduous forest on 

 sandy soil), 1 cf , 2 9 . 



Dorsey, Maryland, VIII, 20, 1914, (Miss R. Jones), 1 d", [U. S. N. M.]. 



Washington, District of Columbia, IX, 1883, 1 9, [Hebard Cln.]. 



Falls Church, Virginia, VIII, 4, (A. N. Caudell), 1 d^, [U. S. N. M.]. 



Clarendon, Virginia, VIII, 1913, (H. A. Allard), 1 d", [U. S. N. M.]. 



Petersburg, Virginia, VII, 23, 1913, (R. & H.; in grasses and low bushes 

 in wet place near woods), 1 cf, 3 9 . 



Bayville, Virginia, VIII, 19, 1908, (R.), 1 d, [A. N. S. P.].5 



Raleigh, North Carolina, VII, 8, 1903, (Morse), 3 cf , [Morse Cln.]. 



New Berne, North Carolina, VIII, 24, 1908, (R.), 1 c^, [A. N. S. P.J.^ 



Sand Mountain near Trenton, Georgia, VII, 9, 1905, CMorse), 1 cf , 

 [Morse Cln.]. 



Thompson's Mills, Georgia, (H. A. Allard), 1 c^, [U. S. N. M.]. 



Silver Lake, Georgia, VIII, 10, 1913, 1 d, [Ga. St. Cln.]. 



Amblycorypha huasteca (Saussure) (PI. XI, fig. 35; pi. XII, figs. 43 

 and 52.) 



1859. Ph[aneroptera] huasteca Saussure, Revue et Magasin de Zoologie, 

 2e ser., xi, p. 205. [Tampico,^ Mexico.] 



1862. P[hylloptern] caudata Scudder, Boston Journ. Nat. Hist., vii, p. 

 445. [Texas.] 



We have been able to examine tlie single type specimen of 

 Scudder's caudata and find it to be inseparable from Tampico 

 topotypes of huasteca. The type of caudata is a large female with 

 a heavy ovipositor, but it is readily • matched in the numerous 

 Texan individuals before us. The measurements of the type of 

 caudata are as follows: length of body exclusive of ovipositor, 

 25.5 mm.; length of pronotum, 8; greatest (caudal) width of disk 

 of pronotum, 5; length of tegmen, 39.3; greatest width of tegmen, 

 10.5; length of caudal femur, 35.5; length of ovipositor, 21. 



Examination of the available series of this species shows that the 

 distal margin of the subgenital plate of the male varies some- 

 what in the exact degree of truncation, this rarely being arcuate 

 emarginato-truncate, the vast majority, however, having the 

 margin straight truncate. In no specimen is there anj^ approach 

 to the v-emarghiation of the related forms. 



The distribution of this species is seen to cover an area extending 

 from northeastern (Fairmount) and central-southern (Earlier 



■'' Previously recorded by us as A. oblongifolia, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. 

 Phila., 1910, p. 637. 



•^ Vide Brunncr, Monogr. der Phaneropt., p. 267. 



