MORGAN HEBARD 



99 



band across the state. It includes the following localities as 

 indicated by material before us: De Leon Springs to Trilby on 

 the north, Fort Reed/" Kissimmee and Arcadia on the south. 



The following color phases are developed in this species. A. 

 Both sexes often with general coloration light yellowish brown 

 to dark brown, sometimes speckled with darker brown, rarely 

 with lateral caiinae of pronotum very narrowly buffy. Rarely 

 the dorsal surface of head, pronotum and alxlomen is blackish 

 brown in this and the laterally green phase. B. Frequent 

 males are brown with dorsal surface of head, pronotum, prox- 

 imal portion of abdomen and tegmina green. C. Frequent 

 females, very rarely males, are green, with dorsal surface of head, 

 pronotum and all of abdomen brown, the caudal femora some- 

 times suffused distad with brown. 



Map 1. Showing distribution of Radinolatum brevipenne brevipenne by 

 dots, of Radinotatum brevipenne peninsulare by squares, and of material 

 intermediate between these races by circles. 



This insect is everywhere met with in the pine-needles and 

 slender grasses of the pine forests which extend over the greater 

 portion of its distri])ution, where its remarkably slender form 



^'^ The series recorded from this locaHty by Scuthlcr is before us. 



TRAN.S. AM. ENT. SOC, XLVIII. 



