Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology 71 



of the Warren Woods Preserve specimens were also taken 

 from the sandy shores of a small brook and from the wet, 

 sandy margins of a spring-fed pool on a marshy hillside. In 

 June the nymphs were far more numerous than the adults ; 

 September 3 they occurred in about equal numbers. 



GRYLLINAE 



Ncmobius fasciatus fasciatus (DeGeer). 



Warren Woods, August 30 to September 3. 1919, 5 males, 12 females; 



September 5 to 7. 1920, 4 males, 5 females. 

 Sawyer Dunes, August 31, 1919, i male, 2 females. 

 New Buffalo. September 2, 1919, 8 males, 16 females ; September 9, 



1920, 2 males, 6 females. 

 Three Oaks, September 4, 1920, 6 males, 9 females. 



This species is found in the latter part of the season in a 

 great variety of habitats. It is abundant in dry, grassy fields 

 and pastures, in cultivated fields and grassy orchards, in fields 

 of second growth scrub, in the grassy margins of open woods, 

 in roadside and forest margin thickets on low and high ground, 

 in the drier portions of sedge and lizard's tail marshes, and 

 in moist meadow pastures. Specimens were also taken in 

 open oak forests, among the dead leaves and low undergrowth, 

 among the moss and low herbage underneath the willow thicket 

 surrounding one of the dune ponds, and in company with 

 Nemobius pali0tris, among the bases of the grasses and sedges 

 in the marshy borders of Klute's lakes. 



Hancock has recorded taking the long-winged form at light 

 at Lakeside. 



Neinobiiis palustris paliistris lUatchley. 



Three Oaks (Klute's lakes), September 4. 1920, 3 males, i female. 



Taken in the marsh surrounding Klute's lakes, on wet black 

 muck, and climbing about on the vegetation, among the bases 

 of the sedge and grass clumps ; in company with Ncmobius 

 fasciatus, but much less numerous than that species. 



