ORTHOPTERA 



489 



DISTRIBUTION OF ORTHOPTERA IN THE GALAPAGOS ISLANDS. 



Note. New species in black face type. I,ocalities previously reported are shown by an *, 

 not previously reported, by a t- 



Desmopleura concinna Scudd. In addition to this, he obtained 

 eight new species or two-thirds as many (indigenous species) 

 as had been previously known, besides several subspecies and 

 races not included in the table. These species fall in six 

 genera, three of which had not been previously reported from 

 the Islands. Of these genera one, Temnopteryx, belongs to 

 the Blattidae, a family not hitherto represented in the indigenous 

 fauna. These specimens were obtained in fifty-four localities 

 or excluding the cosmopolitan species in fifty. Thirty-two of 

 these localities, or excluding the cosmopolitan species thirty, 

 are new. 



Fifteen of the Galapagos Islands are now known to possess 

 Orthoptera. This number does not include small islets (like 



