130 BULLETIN 17 5, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



Fort Wingate; Otero County, near Alamogordo; San Juan County, Aztec; 

 Santa Fe County, San Ildefonso; Socorro County, San Francisco River, San 

 Mateo Mountains; Valencia County, Tajique. Additional specimens were 

 labeled "east of the White Sands" and "Ft. Conrad," localities that could 

 not be found in atlases. 



Colorado: Archuleta County, Pagosa. 



Arizona: Cochise County, Hereford, Fort Huachuca, Chiricahua Mountains, 

 Pinery Canyon in Chiricahua Mountains, White River Canyon; Coconino 

 County, Canyon Diablo, Walnut, Colorado Chiquito (Little Colorado River) ; 

 Graham County, Camp Grant; Maricopa County, Glendale; Phoenix; Cave- 

 creek; Mohave County, 15 miles south of Hackberry, mesa near Fort Mohave, 

 Colorado River above Bill Williams River; Navajo County, Winslow; Pima 

 County, Tortillita Mountains; SoUder Canyon in Tortillita Mountains, 

 Fort Lowell, Tucson, 28 miles northwest of Tucson; Pinal County, Superior; 

 Santa Cruz County, Nogales; Yavapai County, Camp Verde, Fort Whipple, 

 near Kirkland; Yuma County, Yuma. Other specimens bear the indefinite 

 localities Huachuca Mountains, Gila River, Kaibab Forest, Camp J. A. 

 Packer, Oak Orchard, Willow Spring, Canyon del Muerto, or Cedar Ranch 

 Wash, none of which could be located. 



California: Imperial County, Silsbee; Riverside County, Bottom Lands, between 

 San Bernardino and Rio San Pedro, Mecca. 



Additional published records are as follows: 



Mexico: Sonora, Rush Lake (Cope, 1900, p. 871); Noria (Taylor, 1936, p. 493). 



New Mexico: Grant County, Fort Webster (Baird and Girard, 1853, p. 68; Van 

 Denburgh, 1924, p. 220), Fort Bayard (Yarrow, 1875, p. 541; Van Denburgh, 

 1924, p. 220), 2 miles north of Rodeo (Burt and Burt, 1929b, p. 457); Otero 

 County, Alamogordo, southern Guadalupe Mountains (Mosauer, 1932, p. 15); 

 Sandoval County, Bernalillo (Van Denburgh, 1924, p. 220). 



Arizona: Cochise County, Carr Canyon (Huachuca Mountains) (Stone, 1911, p. 232; 

 Van Denburgh, 1920, p. 26; Van Denburgh, 1922, vol. 2, p. 736); Miller 

 Canyon (Huachuca Mountains) (Van Denburgh, 1920, p. 26; Van Denburgh, 

 1922, vol. 2, p. 736), Ash Canyon (Huachuca Mountains), San Pedro Valley, 

 2 miles east of Benson, 2 miles south of Fairbank, 5 miles southeast of Fort 

 Huachuca, 10 miles east of Fort Huachuca, 13 miles north of Tombstone, 

 Sulphur Springs Valley (3 miles west of Dos Cabezas), 12 miles southeast of 

 Dos Cabezas, 10 miles southeast of Willcox (all Gloyd, 1937b, p. 119); 

 Coconino County, Painted Desert (Franklin, 1914, p. 2), El Tovar (Grand 

 Canyon), Williams, Canyon Padre, Two Guns, 3 miles west of Dennison 

 (Klauber, 1932a, p. 79); Maricopa County, Wickenburg (Gloyd, 1937a, p. 

 17), 7 miles east of Mesa (Gloyd, 1937b, p. 119); Mohave County, north side 

 Grand Canyon (Stone, 1911, p. 232; Van Denburgh, 1920, p. 26; Van Den- 

 burgh, 1922, vol. 2, p. 736); Pima County, Las Gijas (Stone, 1911, p. 232; 

 Van Denburgh, 1920, p. 26; Van Denburgh, 1922, vol. 2, p. 736), Canada 

 del Ore (20 miles north of Tucson) (Gloyd, 1937b, p. 119), 9 miles north of 

 Tucson (MacCoy, 1932, pi 23); Yavapai County, Nelson, 4 miles east of 

 Seligman, Crookton (Klauber, 1932a, p. 79); Yuma County, Lechuguilla 

 Desert, 15 miles south of WeUton (Gloyd, 1937b, p. 119); ? County: Wilton 

 Spring (Cope, 1900, p. 876; Van Denburgh, 1920, p. 26; Van Denburgh, 

 1922, vol. 2, p. 736). 



Habits and habitat. — Comparatively little has been recorded of the 

 habits of affinis. The earliest note found is given by Coues (1875, 

 p. 618), who says: "Specimens could be found [about Fort Whipple] 



