80 Journal New York Entomological Society. [Vol. xxiv, 



Claremont, Cal. (C. F. Baker), 2 nearly adult 5- i very small juv. 

 J*5 [Hebard and Cln. and U. S. N. M.]. 



Los Angeles County (D. W. Coquillett), i J*, i juv. 5 [U. S. 

 N. M.]. 



San Bernardino, Cal. (G. W. Dunn), 3 nearly adult J- i Juv. 5 

 [Hebard Cln.]. 



Beaumont, Cal., 2,700 feet, IX, 28, 1910 (Rehn and Hebard; dead 

 on adobe plain), i nearly adult 5 [Hebard Cln.]. 



Mojave Desert, Cal., VH, 5, 1893 (Loew), i juv. 5 [U. S. N. M.]. 



San Diego, Cal. (J. L. Lippincott), 2 5, i nearly adult J, i juv. J 

 [A. N. S. P.] ; 2 nearly adult 5, 2 juv. 5. i very small juv. ^ [Hebard 

 Cln.]; VHI, 1900 (Marlatt), i juv. $ [Hebard Cln.]. 



Scudder's records of fasciatus and oculatus all apply to fitscus, of 

 which species these names are synonyms. His records of longispina 

 from San Diego, California, and of irregularis from Fort Tejon, 

 California, are incorrect, being properly referable to fuscus. 



Stenopelmatus longispina Brunner. (Plate I, Figs. 6 to 9.) 

 XXXVIII, p. 260. \_(^, Vancouver, British Columbia.] 



1888. Stenopelmatus calif ornicus Brunner, Verb, zool.-bot. Gesellsch. 

 Wien, XXXVIII, p. 261. [$, Vancouver, British Columbia.] 



1888. Stenopelmatus irregularis Brunner, Verh. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, 

 XXXVIII, p. 261. [5, Mazatlan, Mexico; Arizona; California.] 



1902. Stenopelmatus terrenus Rehn, Ent. News, XIII, p. 240. [[Juv.] 5 

 (incorrectly), Texas.] 



Typical material of the differently appearing sexes of the present 

 species were described by Brunner, the male as longispina, the female 

 as irregularis. Furthermore, it is evident that calif ornicus is based 

 upon a female in which the third and fourth internal spines of the 

 caudal libicX are not more widely separated than the others. This is 

 simply a minor variant which occurs in a few specimens of several 

 series before us. Rehn's name, terrenus, is based upon a typical im- 

 mature female which has, however, been dried after immersion in 

 alcohol, with pronotum more decidedly constricted caudad than usual 

 as a result. The specimen probably came from California, having 

 been obtained from the Cope collection of reptiles, where it had been 

 doubtless incorrectly labelled. Another immature male specimen of 



5 Recorded, with a question, by Rehn as 5. californicus. 



1888. Stenopelmatus longispina Brunner, Verh. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, 



