194 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 



L. hirsuta, Knoch. 



Not common ; generally distributed. Rare, Westville — Lie- 

 beck. Camden and Gloucester counties — Wenzel. 



L. balia, Say. 



I have taken this in the State. Exact locality unknown. 



L. hirticula, Knoch. 



Common everywhere. I took it at New Brunswick this 

 season. 



L. crenulata, Froehl. 



Not common. I have taken it near Jersey City. Camden and 

 Gloucester counties — Wenzel. 



L. ilicis, Knoch. 



Not rare. A few specimens near Jersey City. Newark. 

 Generally distributed, moderately abundant — Liebeck, W^enzel. 



L. quercus, Knoch. 



Rare. Isolated specimens from different localities seen. 



L. tristis, Fabr. 



Common everywhere in the State. 



In this list I have added two species not actually taken in the 

 State, but which are so distributed faunally that their occurrence 

 is almost a certainty. Two other species — 



L. marginalis, Lee. 



L. villifrons, Lee— 



Are also almost certain to occur. My collection, now in the 

 United States National Museum, contained many specimens col- 

 lected by me in this State, and from my paper in the Proceedings 

 United States National Museum for 1888, these localities are 

 taken. 



PHYTALUS, Er. 

 P. georgianus, Horn. 



Hammonton, a single specimen only — Schwarz. 



POLYPHYLLA, Harr. 

 P. variolosa, Hentz. 



Atlantic county, rare — Wenzel. Atlantic City, rare — Liebeck. 

 Sandy Hook, rather commonly washed up on the shore — Smith. 



