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THE INSECTS OF NEW JERSEY. 
T. trinotata Say. Throughout the State, locally common and sometimes 
injurious. The larva is the “potato stalk borer,” which eats out the 
stalk of the plant and prevents the crop from maturing. The beetles 
remain in the stalks all winter, and if these stalks are raked up and 
burned when the crop is harvested the entire brood will be destroyed. 
The native food is nettle. 
AMPELOGLYPTER Lee. 
A. ater Lee. Cape May Court House V, 26 (W). 
PSEUDOBARIS Lee. 
P. augusta Lee. Hopatcong (Pm); Snake Hill (Bf). 
P. nigrina Say. Throughout the State V, VI; not common. 
CENTRINUS Sch. 
C. calvus Lee. DaCosta VI, 3 (Brn). 
C. picumnus Hbst. Common throughout the State on flowers VI-VIII. 
C. albotectus Casey. Angle-sea VII (Bf). 
C. perscitus Hbst. New Jersey (Casey). 
C. penicellus Hbst. Riverton IX, Woodbury VI, 7, Glassboro VII, 27, IX 
(GG); Atco VII, Anglesea VII (W). 
C. scutellum-album Say. Common throughout the State VII. 
NICENTRUS Casey. 
N. I i neicol I is Boh. Throughout the State locally and seasonally common. 
LIMNOBARIS Bedel. 
L. confusa Boh. Hopatcong (Pm); Orange Mts., rare (Bf). 
L. confinis Lee. Montclair (U S Ag); New Jersey (Jiil). 
L. concinnus Lee. So. Jersey (W). 
L. rectirostris Lee. Hopatcong (Pm); So. Orange (Jiil); Newark VII 
(Bf). 
OLIGOLOCHUS Casey. 
O. robustus Casey. “New Jersey”; type locality (Li). 
IDIOSTETHUS Casey. 
I. tubulatus Say. Hopatcong (Pm); Ft. Lee (Sf); Orange Mts. (Bf). 
BARILEPTON Lee. 
B. filiforme Lee. Salt meadows V (Bf); Masonville VI, 16 (W). 
B. albescens Lee. Westviile VII, 2, one example (Brn). 
B. quadricolle Lee. West Hoboken, one specimen (Jiil). 
PLOCAMUS Lee. 
P. hispidulus Lee. New Brunswick (Sm); Lakehurst VII, 4 (Bf); Atcc- 
VIII, 21 (W); breeds in dead twigs of locust (W). 
