278 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 
LIMNICHUS Latr. 
L. punctatus Lee. Newark, rare (Bf); Burlington County (Sm). 
L. ovatus Lee. Lahaway V, 28, on cranberry bogs (Sm); Anglesea II, 
22 "(W). 
FORCINOLUS Muis. & Rey. 
F. minimus Fabr. Lakehurst (Brb, Jl). 
Family NOSO'DENDRID®. 
Very similar to the “Byrrhidse; more bronzed, less silky and feeders 
on the sap of trees. 
NOSODENDRON Latr. 
/ N. unicolor Say. Ft. Lee (div); Snake Hill, Orange Mts., g. d., rare 
(Bf); Atlantic City (W). 
Family PARNIDiE. 
These are aquatic beetles, with long legs not fitted for swimming. They 
are usually gray or black, sometimes striped with yellow, and may be 
found clinging to the under side of stones or wood debris in streams and 
ponds. They are oblong or elongate, convex, and the division between 
thorax and abdomen is unusually well marked. The larvae are aquatic, 
flattened, and resemble crustaceans, in appearance. 
PSEPHENUS Hald. 
/ P. lecontei Lee. Hemlock Falls, not rare (Bf); Newark (Coll); Millbum, 
—"“^"^STsfbnes in streams (Bt); Echo Lake, on stones and lily pads (Ds); 
Lake Macopin, abundant, walking on large submerged stones (Lg); 
Spotswood (Rob). 
DRYOPS Oliv. 
D. lithophilus Germ. Throughout the State, not rare, V-VIII. 
D. fastigiatus Say. Hopatcong (Pm); Orange Mt. and Newark district 
(div); Jamesburg, Lakehurst (Rob). 
/ D. striatus Lee. Orange Mts. (Bf); Jamesburg, Lakehurst (Rob). 
ELMIS Latr. 
E. bivittatus Lee. Jamesburg (Rob); “New Jersey” (Lg). 
E. 4-notatus Say. Ft. Lee (Sf); Clifton (LI); Jamesburg, Spotswood, 
Lakehurst (Rob); Atco (W). 
/ E. elegans Lee. Newark (Bf); Westfield Conn. (Sf). 
