40 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. I4I 



Byrsotria cabrerae 



Cuba. — In sea-coast woods : "The species [this and Byrsotria 

 fumigata] are ground-dwelling, hiding under stones and other shelter" 

 (Rehn and Hebard, 1927). 



Byrsotria fumigata 



Cuba. — Ground dwelling, hiding under stones, etc. ; also a cave 

 inhabitant (Rehn and Hebard, 1927). 



Cahita borero 



Brazil, Matto Grosso. — Beaten from tree foliage in dry scrub, from 

 tree foliage at edge of dry riverine tangle, and from undergrowth in 

 a dry forest area (Rehn, 1937a). 



Cahita nahua 



Honduras. — All beaten from foliage along roads or in thickets, 

 during rainy season (Rehn, 1937a). 



Cariblatta antiguensis 

 Virgin Islands, St. Croix. — Common under heaps of rubbish 

 (Beatty, 1944). 



Trinidad. — On herbage below bananas ; all stages on Hibiscus at 

 night; in grass at dusk; on low herbage under old coconut (Princis 

 and Kevan, 1955). 



Cariblatta cuprea 

 Jamaica. — In leaves on leaf mold in hillside forest (Hebard, 1916a). 



Cariblatta delicatula 



West Indies. — In debris in short grass in open, Cuba. Under dead 

 petioles of coconut palms, San Domingo. In leaves on leaf mold in 

 hillside forest, Jamaica (Hebard, 1916a). 



Cariblatta hylaea 



Honduras. — Found at foot and on lower slopes of first ridges of 

 the Sierra Pija, from 75 to at least 800 feet above sea level, where 

 vegetation ranged from abandoned banana patches overgrown with 

 Heliconia and Cecropia and interspersed with forest trees, at the foot 

 of the hills, to primeval lowland forest (ceibas, figs, palms, etc.) on 

 the slopes. In the banana patches C. hylaea was found on hanging 

 dead banana and Cecropia leaves ; on the slopes it was found on 

 undergrowth foliage, hanging dead leaves, and in dead leaves on 

 ground (Rehn, 1945a). 



