The Genus Acrida. 167 



Gerst., 1873, Beitr. zur Ins. F. Sans., 215. 

 Giglio, Tos., 1893, Boll. Mus. Tor., No. 164, p. 5. 

 Griffini, 1897, Note Faune Piem., xi, 2. 

 Novak., 1883, Orth. Les., 125. 



Tryxalis nasutus. Bonn. Fin., 1885, Ortb. Tunis., 23. 

 Truxalis oiamta. Burr, 1899, But. Mo. Mag. (2), 10. 



Charp., 1841, Germ. Zeitschr. f. Nat., iii, p. 305. 



Finot, 1883, Cat. Orth. France, 6. 



Id., 1883, Orth. Fr., 46. 



Id., 1897, Orth. de I'Al^^-Tunis., 44. 



Graber, 1870, Faun. Stud. Syrm., 377. 



Krauss, 1887, Derm. Orth. SiciHens., p. 10. 



Krauss, 1890, Erklarung Savigny's Egypt, 251, 252. 



Pancic, 1883, Orth. Serb., 46. 



Redt, 1889, Orth. Oestr., 23. 



Redt, 1900, Derm. Orth. O.-Ung. Deutschland, 44. 



Retowski, 1888, Bull. Soc. Imp. Mosc, 409. 



Schult., 1898, Zool. Jahrb., viii, 73. 



Schult., 1898, Orth. Somali., 185. 



Werner, 1898, Verb. k. k. Zool.-Bot. Ges. Wien., p. 154. 



Zub., 1896, Hor. Soc. Ent. Ross., xxx, 184. 



Zub., 1898, Ann. Mus. Zool. Ac. Imp. Sci. Pet., 70. 



Trtixalis nasuta. Krauss, 1892, Wien. Ent. Zeit., 148. 

 Schaum., 1862, Peters' Reise Mossamb. Ins., 129. 



Patria. In Europe : All Southern Europe, very 

 common. The most northerly points of its dis- 

 tribution appear to be Budapest, the southern slopes of 

 the Alps, and the south of France, Mai^seilles, Mont- 

 pellier (Coll. Br.), the whole of the Balkans, and South 

 Hungary (common), Italy, Sicily. In AFRICA : Algeria, 

 Tunis, Egypt Senegal, Sierra Leone, Cameroons, Gaboon, 

 South Africa, Natal, Cape Colony, Madagascar. In AsiA : 

 Asia Minor, Syria, Turkestan, Himalaya, China, Hong- 

 Kong, Hainan, Japan, Cambodia, Cochin China, Malaccas, 

 Singapore, Celebes, Sumatra, Bangkok, Java, Borneo, 

 Philippines. In Australia: Rockhaiiipton, Queensland, 

 Sydney, Moreton Bay, Lord Howe's Island, Port Adelaide, 

 Victoria, New Holland. 



10. Acrida o'ufescens (Pal.). 



" Truxale ronssatre. Antennes, tete, elytres varies on rayes de 

 brun. Abdomen et pieds roussatres. (Fig. 2.) 



