194 BRAZILIAN DERMAPTERA AND ORTHOPTERA 



This specimen is inseparable from the allotype ( 9 ) of asinus, 

 now before us. The size is, however, very slightly greater. 



Hyalopteryx rufipennis Charpentier 



1845. Hyalopteryx rufipennis Charpentier, Orthopt. Descr. et Depict., tab. 

 46. [Brazil.] 



Parand. (E. D. Jones.) Two males. [U. S. Nat. Mus.] 

 Sao Paulo, State of Sao Paulo. (Hempel.) One male. [Scud- 



der Collection.] 



These specimens are typical of the species, and apparently 



these are the first exact records of it from eastern Brazil. 



Trusalis brevicornis (Johannson) 



1764. Gryllus hnvicornis Johannson, Amoen. Acad., vi, p. 398. [North 

 America (Pennsylvania).] 



Itatiba, State of Sao Paulo. April, 1910. (J. Lima.) One 

 male. 



Orphula pagana (8t§,l) 



1860. Gomphocerus ( Hyalopteryx) paganus St&l, Kong. Svenska Freg. Eugenies 

 Rcsa, Zool., i, Ins., p. 339. [Rio Janeiro, Brazil.] 



Itatiba, State of Sao Paulo. April, 1910. (J. Lima.) Two 

 males, two females. 



Estagao Alto do Serra, State of Sao Paulo. January, 1909. 

 (E. Schwebel.) Two males, one immature male. 



We have straightened out the relationship and correct identity 

 of this species in a recent paper. ^ The species, as Orphulina 

 veteratoria, has been recorded from the vicinity of Sao Paulo, 

 taken in the month of September. 



Orphulina veteratoria Rehn 



1906. Orphulina veteratoria Rehn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1906, p. 21, 



figs. 5 and 6. (In part: female only.) [Sao Paulo, Brazil.] 

 1906. Orphulina ocuta Rehn, Ibid., p. 23, figs. 7 and 8. [Sao Paulo, Brazil.] 



As we have shown elsewhere,^ the male of veteratoria equals 

 Orphula pagana, then unrecognized, while the female, which at 

 the time of description we felt might not represent the same 

 species as the male, is the same as our acuta. As we stated, in 

 the paper referred to, that in case the two sexes proved to be 



' Trans. Amer. Entom. Soc, xliii. p. 344, (1917). 

 * Trans. Amer. Entom. Soc, xliii, p. 344. (1917). 



