Se P t,i9°5-l Proceedings of the Society. 167 



52. . "Notices of the Ilemiptera Heteroptera in the Collection of the late T. 



W. Harris, M.D." Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, 

 vol. XIX, 1876-1878. 1878. 



53- • " Hemiptera," in the Standard Natural History. 1885. 



54- • "Check List of the Described Hemiptera Heteroptera of North Amer- 

 ica." Brooklyn Entomological Society. 1886. 



55- • " " the Hemiptera- Heteroptera of the Island of Grenada, West 



Indies." Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. 1894. 



5°- • " Hemiptera of Lower California." Proceedings California Academy of 



Sciences, 2d ser. , vol. IV, 1893-94. 1894. 



57- • "list of Hemiptera Heteroptera of Las Vegas Hot Springs, New 



Mexico, collected by Messrs. E. A Schwarz and Herbert S. Barber." Pro- 

 ceedings U. S. National Museum, vol. XXVII. 1904. 



58. Edward P. Van Duzee. A List of the Hemiptera of Buffalo and Vicinity. 



Bulletin Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences, vol. V, no. 4. 1894. 



59. C. M. Weed. "Studies in Pond Life," Bulletin Ohio Agricultural Experiment 



Station, Technical Series. Vol. I, Number I. 1889. 



Explanation of Plate VII. 



Fig. 1. Notonecta indica Linne. 

 Fig. 2. Notonecta undulata Say. 

 Fig. 3. Notonecta variabilis Fieber. 



Fig. 4. Notonecta uhleri Kirkaldy. (Drawn from cotype. ) 

 Fig. 5. Notonecta mexicana Amyot & Serville var. ceres Kirkaldy. (Drawn 

 from cotype. ) 



Fig. 6. Notonecta irrorata Uhler. 

 Fig. 7. Notonecta lutea Midler. 

 Fig. 8. Notonecta shooterii Uhler. 

 Fig. 9 Notonecta insulata Kirby. 

 All enlarged three diameters. 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE NEW YORK ENTO- 

 MOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 



Meeting of November 15, 1904 (continued from page 102). 



Mr. Davis read a letter from Mrs. Annie Trumbull Slosson, in which she stated 

 that she had taken in pools of brackish water in southern Florida, an undetermined 

 Limnobates, a specimen of which she sent for comparison with Limnobates lineata 

 spoken of by Mr. Bueno. She also referred to her finding of Halobates ivnllersterfi 

 on the beach at Lake Worth, Fla. She published a record of this in 1901 and no 

 other record is known of their occurring on land, their usual habitat being far out at 

 sea. She also sent specimens of Brentkus anchorago to show the great variations 

 in size, remarking that she had taken it in numbers in its breeding places under the 

 bark of gumbo-limbo (Bnrsera gammi/era) but had also found it frequently on 



