1919] Morse — A List of the Orthoptera of New England 31 



73. Pine Tree-cricket, Oecanthus pini Beutenmiiller. 

 Said to live only in pine-trees. Reported from Gloucester, Cape 

 Cod, and Marthas Vineyard, Mass. 



74. Two-spotted Tree-cricket, Neoxabea bipunctata DeGeer. 

 Known in small numbers from Connecticut: New Canaan, New 

 Haven, and Portland, Aug. 14 to Sept. 11. 



75. Striped Bush-cricket, Anaxipha exigua Say, 

 Walden reports this species at Westbrook, Ct., living in tangled 

 vegetation on and near saltmarshes. 



76. Hapithus vagus Morse. 

 An adventive exotic species which maintained itself for several 

 years in the greenhouses of the Botanic Garden at Cambridge, 

 Mass. 



77. x\merican Mole-cricket, Gryllotalpa hexadactyla Perty. 

 Probably occurs throughout New England but is very local and 



difficult to capture. Lives in meadows, along streams and about 

 ponds, burrowing in the turf and muddy shores. Its call might 

 easily be mistaken for that of a small frog. 



78. European Mole-cricket, Gryllotalpa vulgaris Latreille. 

 Reported from Nantucket, where it was doubtless introduced 



with importations of plants from Europe. Whether established 

 or not remains to be proved. 



79. Pygmy Mole-cricket, Tridactylus apicalis Say. 

 Lives on and in the damp sand on the edges of ponds and streams. 

 Recorded from Connecticut, and from Cambridge, Winchester, 

 and Nantucket, Mass. Adults were common at the last-named 

 locality on July 13; a few nymphs were found on the same date and 

 on Sept. 10. 



Family Acridid^, Locusts. 



Subfamily Acridinae (Tryxalinse auct.). 



80. Bunch-grass Locust, Pseudopomala brachyptera Scudder. 



Common locally in coarse grasses, especially Andropogon scopa- 



rius, on wild and uncultivated lands from southwestern Maine, 



southern New Hampshire and Vermont southward, including 



Marthas Vineyard and all of Connecticut. July to September. 



