REHN AND HEBARD 87 



Tallahassee, Florida, IX, 2, 1915, (R. & H.; on dead leaves around bushes 

 and under tall water oaks on oak and pine clad hill crest), 2 cf, 6 9 . 



Carrabelle, Florida, IX, 3, 1915, (H.; among bushes on outer border of 

 swampy area), 1 cf. 



Lake City, Florida, 1 c?," [U. S. N. M.]; VI, 9, 1899, 1 9 , [Davis Chi.]. 



Jacksonville, Florida, V, 1885, (Ashmead), 1 jUv. cf, [Hebard Cln.]. 



Atlantic Beach, Florida, VII, 24, 1911, (R. & H.; on ground under live oak), 

 1 9. 



Pablo Beach, Florida, VIII, 11 and 14, 1905, (R. & H.; in pahnetto scrub 

 and near edge of salt marsh), 3 cf , 1 9 , [Hebard Cln. and A. N. S. P.].^ 



Hastings, Florida, (A. J. Brown), 2 juv. 9, [Morse CLn.]. 



Fort Reed, Florida, IV, 17, 1876, (Comstock), 1 juv. cf (sex uncertain, 

 abdomen imperfect), [Cornell Univ.].^" 



Morritt, Florida, VII, 15, 1915, (A. R. ISIoore), 1 9 , [U. S. N. M.]. 



Atlanticus dorsalis (Burmeister) (PI. VI, figs. 17 and 23; pi. VII, figs. 7, 



16 and 25; pi. VIII, figs. 9 and 17.) 

 1838. D[ecticus] dorsalis Burmeister, Handb. der Entom., ii, abth, ii, pt. 1, 



p. 713. [South Carolina".] 

 1905. Atlanticus gibbosus Rehn and Hebard (not of Scudder, 1894), Proc. 



Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1904, p. 797. [Thomasville, Georgia.] 

 1907. Atlanticus dorsalis Caudell, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., x.xxii, p. 323. 



(Part.) [Jacksonville, Florida.] 



Our association of Burmeister's name with this species is, 

 as in the case of pachymerus, a matter of ehmination. The 

 present species certainly occurs in eastern South CaroHna; a 

 statement we feel warranted to make with our knowledge of 

 the field conditions there and also where the present species 

 has been taken. Of the other species taken near the probable 

 type locality not one would answer the brief description of 

 Burmeister. He particularly mentions that the tegmina of the 

 male sex (the only sex known to him) are hidden under the 

 pronotum, a condition found only in the present species, gihhosus 

 and glaber. The large gihhosus far exceeds Burmeister's measure- 

 ments and again has the lateral angles of the pronotum well 



3^ Reported by CaudeU (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxii, p. 327, (1907)). 



55 Previously reported by Rehn and Hebard (Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 

 1907, p. 315, (1907)). 



'^Recorded as dorsalis by Scudder (Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., xix, 

 p. 83, (1877)). 



"Probably in the vicinity of Georgetown, South Carolina — see footnote 

 18, page 53. 



TRANS. AM. EXT. SOC, XLII. 



