126 



BULLETIN" 108, UNnTED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



Two individuals with a slightly more characteristic pigmentation 

 were fomid in a colony by the writer in the Big Basin in the Santa 

 Cruz Mountains, California, on June 13, 1917. Thev had only rudi- 



Fio. 65.— Teemopsis ANQUSTicoLLia. Dorsal view of enlarged queen of the first form. (Note 



RELATIVELY SMALL .SIZE OF THE QUEEN OF THIS LARGE TERMITE.) X 9. 



mentary wing pads and pigment to the traces of eyes, but are undoubt- 

 edly reproductive forms (fig. 66, 1). Normal second forms with 

 longer wing pads are apparently not so common. 



