ART. 4 BEETLES OF THE GENUS COCCINELLA DOBZHANSKY 23 



Manitoba: Aweme, Mile 17 on Hudson Bay Railroad. 



Alberta: Banff. 



Alaska: Mountain Sheep Creek (22 miles below Eagle) (Harrington collector). 



Yukon: Dawson (J. M. Jessup collector), Whitehorse (J. A. Kusche collector). 



British Columbia: Glacier, Agassiz, Vernon, Victoria. 



Maine: Orono, Boothbay, Casco Bay. 



New Hampshire: Mount Washington, Lancaster, Franconia, Center Harbor, 



Farniington, Barnstead, Nashua. 

 Massachusetts: Boston, Arlington, Melrose Highlands, Princeton, Cambridge, 



Stoughton, West Medford, Middleboro, North Saugus, Falmouth, W^oods 



Hole, Oak Bluffs. 

 Rhode Island: Watch Hill. 



Connecticut: South Windsor, New Haven, Cromwell, Brookfield. 

 New York: Adirondack Mountains, Mount Whiteface, Mount Mclntire, New- 

 comb, Wilmington, Lake Placid, Middletown, West Point, Larchmont, Pelham 



Bay, New York, Staten Island, Ithaca. 

 New Jersey: Fort Lee, Passaic, Ramsey, Great Notch, Newark, Westwood> 



Paterson, Chester, Boonton. 

 Pennsylvania: State record. 

 Maryland: State record. 

 Michigan: Whitefish Point, Alpena, Detroit. 

 Wisconsin: Madison. 

 Minnesota: Grand Marais, Two Harbors, Duluth, Itasca County, Roseau C oun ty| 



Minneapolis, St. Paul, Lake City, Beaver Dam, Lake Crystal, St. Antony. 

 North Dakota: State record. 

 Montana: Bear Paw Mountains, Columbia Falls. 

 Wyoming: Yellowstone National Park. 

 Colorado: Larimer County, La Veta. 

 New Mexico: Maxwell (National Museum collection). 

 Texas: State record (National Museum collection). 

 Idaho: Moscow, Ashton. 



Utah: Logan (California Academy of Sciences collection). 

 Washington: Pullman. 

 California: Eureka, Klamath (Dobzhansky collector). 



Remarks. — The individuals from Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, 

 New Mexico, Idaho, and Utah are similar to those from the North- 

 eastern States. A few individuals from Washington, Oregon, and 

 California are probably extreme variants of the subspecies subversa 

 LeConte. 



COCCINELLA TRIFASCIATA Linnaeus subspecies SUBVERSA LeConte 



Coccinella subversa LeConte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 7, p. 19, 



1854.— Casey, 1899, p. 89. 

 Coccinella perplexa Mulsant var. subversa LeConte, Johnson, 1910, p. 57. — 



Leng, 1920, p. 216. 



Differs from the typical trifasciata by the distinctly smaller size of 

 the body and by a strong reduction of the black pigmentation of the 

 elytra. Elytra spotless, or with only the scutellar spot (^) , or with 

 only a very small discal spot (3), or with both the scutellar and the 

 discal spots. In any case, the size of the scutellar and the discal 

 spots is very much decreased as compared with typical trifasciata. 



