1!>21] Johnson — Okanagana Rimosa in Nova Scotia 15 



North Carolina, and was subsequently reported by Abbott from 

 Georgia. Mr. Bvieno has a nimiber of specimens taken in the 

 vicinity of New York, and Miss E. P. Butler found it abundant in 

 a small pond near Battle Creek, Michigan, in August, 1920. 



Callicori.va praeusta (Fieber). This holarctic species has sev- 

 eral times been reported from the northern parts of America, but 

 the only record from the United States is that of Parstiley from 

 Maine. I have seen two specimens from the Pacific coast states, 

 one from Lake Cushman, Washington, July 3, 1919 (F. M. Gaige), 

 in the Museum of the University of Michigan, the other from San 

 Francisco, in Mr. Bueno's collection. 



The three females which 1 reported from northern Michigan^*^ 

 as '"probably C. kollarii Fieber," should in all probal)ility be placed 

 in prcrusta. I seriously question the northern records of kollarii, 

 which was originally described from Cuba and from Brazil. 



^» Occ. Papers Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich., No. 73, p. 21, 1919. 



OKANAGANA RIMOSA (SAY) IN NOVA SCOTIA. 



During the past summer (1930), Mr. David H. Linder, while 

 botanizing in southern Nova Scotia, found this little Cicada at 

 several places. In a letter he says: "It appeared to be quite com- 

 mon, especially in dry clearings where white birch and maple is 

 found. About a mile north of Meteghan they were quite common 

 in a dry clearing that had grown up to white birch and were almost 

 numerous enough to be called a swarm. At Argyle, though not 

 quite so thick, they were nevertheless quite common, as was also the 

 case at Barrington, where I captured the specimen." ]\Iteghan and 

 Barrington are about fifty miles apart, while Argyle is nearly mid- 

 way between the two places. In Nova Scotia, ]\Ir. W. T. Davis 

 (Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, 1919, vol. 27, p. 205) records it only 

 from Truro. C. W. Johnson. 



