96 STUDIES IN AMERICAN TETTIGONIIDAE (oRTHOPTERA) 



except that the head is not as sohdly colored but instead is finely 

 vermiculate with that shade, the pronotal lobes are not as deeply 

 or as solidly washed and the infuscation of the caudal femora 

 is not as solid. The dorsum of the head in the type has a pair of 

 broken closely placed dark medio-longitudinal lines, absent in the 

 paratype. Eyes blackish fuscous (type) to old gold (paratype); 

 antennae russet, becoming fuscous distad. The pale margin of 

 the lateral lobes is similar in shape in both individuals, being 

 broad on the ventral margin and narrowest over the sinus, the 

 ventral section of the pale margin clouded with fuscous and the 

 extreme caudal section occasionally washed with greenish 

 (paratype). Tegmina with the marginal field and extreme 

 proximal portion pale, the base color of the remainder ferru- 

 ginous, the other veins and cross nervures lined with fuscous, 

 which is solidly the color of the disto-sutural section of the 

 tegmina. The median carina of the abdomen is brokenly lined 

 with fuscous in the type, but almost unmarked in the paratype, 

 which has, however, the dorsal surface of the abdomen finely 

 stippled with the same shade. Venter aniline yellow, in the 

 paratype becoming pyrite yellow distad. Ventral area of the 

 caudal femora washed with yellow ochre to antimony yellow; 

 caudal tibiae with the spines tipped with blackish fuscous. 



MorpJiological Notes. — The two specimens seen fully agree in 

 the morphological features except that the paratype has the sub- 

 genital plate less narrowed and the emargination of the distal 

 margin less fissate and shallower than in the type. 



Biological Notes. — We know nothing definite regarding the 

 habits or occurrence of the species. 



Distribution. — The low coastal region of southeastern Georgia 

 and northeastern Florida.'** 



Specimens Examined: 2 males. 



Billy's Island, Okeefenokee Swamp, Georgia, VI, 1912, (J. C. Bradley), 

 cf , type, [A. N. S. P.]. 



Hastings, Florida, (A. J. Brown), 1 cf , paratype, [IMorse Cln.]. 



^^ Immature specimens recorded as A . dorsalis by Blatchley (A Nature 

 Wooing, p. 223, (1902)) from Ormond, Florida, may represent this species. 

 See also under dorsalis and (jlnber. 



