438 



species here dates back to a less remote period, but appears to 

 be endemic. 



On the basis of land shell distribution, Pilsbry and others 

 have advanced a theory that all these islands once constituted 

 a single large island and that by continued subsidence the 

 higher points of the large island were left as individual islands 

 separated by channels. 



Our knowledge of the distribution of the native jumping 

 plant lice is not yet sufficient to allow generalization, nor does 

 it seem probable that this group has been resident here 

 farther back than the Pliocene and possibly not as far back as 

 that, wdiile Pilsbry assumes the subsidence to have been earlier 

 than that. So far as our present knowledge of this group goes 

 it does not seem to indicate any union of the islands of this 

 archipelago within the period of time in which this family has 

 been resident here. Chance winds or currents or flights of 

 birds might account for the present distribution of the species, 

 for it is not wide. Most of them seem to be limited to one 

 island, but Trioza ohiacola occurs on both Oahu and Plawaii, 

 nearly at opposite ends of the archipelago, but apparently on 

 none of the islands between. 



Acknowledgements. 



The author wishes to acknowledge with thanks the assist- 

 ance rendered by other entomologists of Honolulu by placing 

 at his disposal their collections of Psyllidae. Messrs. W. M. 

 Giifard, O. H. Savczcv, P. H. Timberlake, and others of the 

 entomological staff of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Associa- 

 tion, D. T. Fullaway and E. M. Ehrhorn have all contributed 

 to this study. The collections represent, though probably very 

 incompletely, the psyllid fauna of the Islands of Oahu, Hawaii, 

 Lanai, Molokai and Maui. The two latter and the northern 

 Island of Kauai need much more exploration for these insects. 



The type specimens of new species and a representative 

 collection of all the Hawaiian species have been deposited with 

 the custodian of types of the Hawaiian Entomological Society, 

 Plonolulu. 



