302 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [June, 



caudal section of the pronotal disk show relationship to the same 

 species." In no one of the characters, however, is an extreme repre- 

 sented, but an intermediate position is clearly recognizable. Thus 

 from the evidence in hand true floridana is apparently restricted to 

 Florida, grading north over an undetermined area into true oblongifolia, 

 the type locality of which is Pennsylvania. 



The series in this collection was taken at Pablo Beach, August 11 

 and 13, two males, two females; San Pablo, August 13, one male, and 

 Gainesville, August 16, three females. At Pablo Beach individuals 

 were taken in salt marsh, swampland and in tall bushes on the dunes, 

 and at San Pablo and Gainesville in undergrowth in pine woods. 



The San Pablo individual is in the pinkish phase of coloration. 

 Other individuals of A. oblongifolia in this type of coloration in the 

 Academy collection are from Absecon, N. J., and Wood's Hole, Mass. 



Amblycorypha ulileri Stai. 



A single male of this species was taken at Gainesville, August 16, in 

 undergrowth in pine woods. 



This is the first Florida record of the species, 



Cyrtophyllus (Lea) floridensis Beutenmuller. 



This interesting katydid was found to be abundant in certain bushes 

 about eight to ten feet high growing on the land face of the dunes 

 at Pablo Beach. On August 12 six males and on August 13 nine males 

 were captured. They were taken wholly with the aid of their song 

 which began shortlj^ before evening. The song, as was stated by 

 Beutenmuller, is distinctly different from that of C. perspicillatus , 

 being much lower, decidedly weaker and consisting of single notes 

 separated by regular intervals. 



The generic name Lea proposed by CaudelP- is not applied by us, as 

 the characters assigned to the genus do not appear to the authors to be 

 of sufficient weight to have generic value, although floridensis is to our 

 mind worthy of being considered subgenerically distinct from C. 

 perspicillatus. 



The color of the living individuals was essentially as in the dried 

 specimens, which were stuffed in the field and have lost but little in 

 consequence. The general dorsal color is bice green, becoming pale 

 green on the limbs and olive-buff on the head and pronotum, the eyes 

 cinnamon and the lateral margins of the disk of the pronotum and the 

 tympanal fields of the tegmina raw umber. The thickened anal vein 



>i Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1904, p. 795. 



'2 Vide Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, XIV, pp. 34 and 42. 



