2 3 o REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 
PTOMOPHAGUS III. 
P. consobrinus Lee. Common everywhere (Sz). 
P. pusio Lee. Bronx Park, N. Y. (Sf); and sure to occur in New Jersey. 
CATOPOMORPHUS Aube. 
C. parasitus Lee. Ft. Lee, Arlington, sweeping at dusk (Sf); Hudson 
Co. (LI); Newark (Bf); Red Bank on Delaware IY, 20 (Brn); occurs 
in nests of “Formica integra.” 
COLON Hbst. 
C. bidentatum Sahib. Eagle Rock, accidentally found on hickory (Bf). 
C. dentatum Lee. Snake Hill, sweeping, at dusk (Sf). 
ANISOTOMA ill. 
A. alternata Mels. Staten Island X (Ds). 
COLENIS Er. 
C. impunctata Lee. Orange Mts., VII, in mushrooms (Sf), Staten Island 
(Ds). 
LIODES Latr. 
L. polita Lee. Staten Island (Lg). 
L. discolor Mels. Hudson Co. (LI); Atlantic Highlands (Sz); Seaville 
VI (Brn). 
L. basalis Lee. Spring Lake (Ch) ; Gloucester VII (W). 
The species of this genus are found on a slime-mold, “Foligo septica,” 
which grows on the surface of stumps of felled trees or under the bark 
CYRTUSA Er. 
C. picipennis Lee. Arlington IV, V, sweeping at dusk (Sf). 
C. egena Lee. Arlington IV, V, sweeping at dusk (Sf). 
ISOPLASTUS Horn. 
I. fossor Horn. New York City, 1 spec. (Sf). 
AGATHIDIUM III. 
A. oniscoides Beauv. Orange Mts. (GG) ; Snake Hill (LI); Highlands 
(Sf); Newark; Salem (Coll); occurs generally in rotten wood and 
under old bark. 
A. exiguum Mels. Hudson Co. (LI); Highlands V, 30, under bark (Sf); 
Westville V, 23, Clementon IV, 21 (Brn); g. d. (Li); Lahaway VI, 28 
(Coll). 
