398 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 
S. destructor Chttn. Anglesea VI, VII 
(div); the type locality. 
S. melanocephalus Fab. Hudson Co. 
(LI); Newark Dist. (Bf); Lahaway 
(Sm); Westville V (div); Anglesea 
V (div). 
S. pontederiae. Chttn. Gloucester V, 
27 (Brn); breeds in roots of pick¬ 
erel weed (Ch). 
S. sayi Gyll. Anglesea VII (Sz). 
Fig. 166.—Bill-bug, Sphenophorus 
sp., from side. 
S. venatus Say. (placidus Say.) Throughout the State, common, V- 
VII, most abundant along the seashore. 
S. apicalis Lee. Gloucester IV, 24 (W); Avalon VI, 23 (Brn). 
S. parvulus Gyll. Throughout the State, locally not rare V-VII; breeds 
in roots of blue grass (Ch). 
S. minimus Chttn. Atlantic City, Anglesea, in wash-up (W). 
S. marinus Chttn. Ocean Co., on cranberry bogs (Sm); Westfield VI, 
Sea Isle VI, 10 (Brn), type locality; Atlantic City (W); Mr. Chitten¬ 
den notes “evidently maritime and probably local.” 
S. retusus Gyll. Throughout the State; not common IV and IX. 
S. gagatinus Gyll. “New Jersey” (Coll); probably Newark Dist. 
“Simplex,” Mr. Chittenden says, is a strictly Pacific Coast form. 
CALANDRA Clairv. 
C. oryzse Linn. The “rice-weevil”; infests stored grain and is g. d. 
C. granaria Linn. The “grain” or “granary weevil,” often injurious in 
Calandra granaria.—a, adult; b, larva ; c, pupa ; d, C. oiyza, adult. 
Fig. 167. 
