362 PROCEEDINGS: BOSTON SOCIETY NATURAL HISTORY. 
summit, 3500 ft., Mt. Washington, and the vicinity of Boston, 
Mass.; and Stamford, Ct. Extralimitally it extends to southern 
New Jersey, Tennessee, Kansas, Montreal, Montana, Washing- 
ton, and northern California. 
Dusky-faced Meadow-grasshopper. 
Orchelimxim concinnum Scudder. 
Fig. 56; Plate 15, fig. 31-34. 
Qrchelimum concinnum Scudder, Boston Joum. Nat. Hist., vol. 7, p. 452 
(1862).— Smith, Rept. Ct. Bd. Agric. for 1872, p. 380 (1873).— Fern ald, 
Orth. N. E., p. 25 (p. 109) (1888).— Rehn and Hebard, Trans. Amer. Ent. 
Soc, vol. 41, p. 60 (1915). 
Orchdimum herbaceum Scudder, Psyche, vol. 9, p. 103 (1900). — ^Walden, 
BuU. Geol. Nat. Hist. Surv. Ct., no. 16, p. 139 (1911). 
This is a slender-bodied species with narrow tegmina and wings 
which usually surpass the hind knees by from 2 or 3 to even 6 or 
7 mm. The wings customarily exceed the tegmina 2 or 3 mm. 
Combined with the narrow thorax the effect of these characters 
is one of attenuation. The ovipositor usually about reaches the 
hind knees. 
The coloration is apparently affected by its salt-marsh habitat, 
often being more dusky and olivaceous than that of our other 
two species, with the sides of the pt-onotum a vivid bluish green. 
FiQ. 56. — Dusky-faced Meadow-grasshopper, Orchelimum concinnum. Female. (After 
Blatchley.) 
Above, a dusky stripe usually extends over the face and top of 
head, dividing into two on top of the pronotum, and is often pro- 
longed backward, suffusing the tegmina in the female or barely 
indicated about the speculum of the male. This duskiness 
increases rarely to such an extent as to approach melanism. 
