154 Journal New York Entomological Society. [Voi. xxiv, 



head polished, the disk of prothorax shining and scarcely punctate, 

 have been taken at Great Falls, Va., June 16 and 19, 1910, and on 

 Plummer's Island, Md., June 15, 191 1, bringing the known distribu- 

 tion of the species much further north. Prof. Fall regards sub- 

 limhatus as a probable variety of tricolor" (This Journal, Vol. XX, 

 pp. 257-258, Dec, 1912). 



Anthocomus erichsoni Lee. Lakehurst, N. J., July 9, and Bronx- 

 ville, N. Y., July 4, 191 1, and June i, 1912. This is an addition to 

 the New Jersey list of 1910. 



Psetidehceiis bicolor Lee. Yaphank, L. L, N. Y., May, 191 1, male. 

 In the 1910 New Jersey list this species is reported from Anglesea 

 only. 



Attains mclanopterus Er. Lakehurst, N. J., June 17. This is 

 an addition to the New Jersey list of 1910. 



Melyrodes cribrata Lee. Ft. Lee, N. J., May 23, one specimen 

 from black-berry blossoms. This species was described from South 

 Carolina and Pennsylvania by Le Conte, but is not mentioned in the 

 New Jersey list and is therefore an addition. Charles Dury reports 

 it under the name of Melyris cribratns in the 1902 list of the Coleop- 

 tera observed near Cincinnati, Ohio, and in the List of the Beetles 

 of the District of Columbia Ulke states that Alymcris cribrata is 

 '■ chiefly found on chestnut blossoms." — Lewis B. Woodruff and Wm. 

 T. Davis. 



Notes on Tiger Beetles from North Carolina. — Mr. Franklin Sher- 

 man recently presented the writer with some interesting Cicindelas 

 collected in North Carolina. He and Mr. C. S. Brimley have made 

 several visits to Sunburst in Haywood County, where in May and 

 June they have taken Cicindela ancocisconensis Harris. This species 

 has been reported from New Hampshire, New York, West Virginia 

 and Illinois by Mr. Edward D. Harris, and from Vermont, New 

 Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Virginia by Mr. 

 Charles W. Leng. A series from Sunburst shows the insect to be 

 brightly marked, but not more so than many specimens from some 

 of the localities above mentioned. On the whole the species appears 

 to be quite constantly marked over its known ranges. 



Other Cicindelas taken at Sunburst at about 3,000 feet elevation 

 are purpurea, splendida, tranqncbanca and repanda. 



