i8 University of Michigar 



lata). Nymphs and adults are abundant here through the 

 summer. 



Anasa tristis (De Geer). Mr. Hubbell took one individual 

 of this common species at Klute's Lake, near Three Oaks, 

 September 4, and a number of specimens were taken at light 

 in our camp on the lake shore early in July. A winter-killed 

 individual of the preceding year was found under the bark of 

 a dead pine on the fore-dune, July 7. 



Anasa annigera (Say). Two specimens, from the grasses 

 in an alder-buttonbush swamp at New Buffalo, September 2. 

 Coriomerns humilis Uhler. One, beaten from willow in a 

 gravel pit at Harbert, July 13. I have compared this specimen 

 with others from Wyoming (determined by Van Duzee) in 

 the Museum of Comparative Zoology, and find no differences. 

 Protenor helfragei Haglund. A few individuals were taken 

 from grasses in a marshy locality behind the Sawyer Dunes ; 

 others were taken at Stevensville and at Klute's Lake. The 

 first adults were found July 21. 



Megalotomus qninquespinosus (Say). One specimen, from 

 roadside grasses in the Warren Woods, July 2, 1919. 



Corisciij'^ conspersus Mont. Abundant in the fields and 

 meadows about the Warren Woods during June and July, 

 19 19. No individuals were taken here during the later part 

 of the summer, nor was this species taken anywhere in Berrien 

 County during the summer of 1920. 



Corisciis eurinus (Say). From the same localities as the 

 preceding, but much less numerous. One individual was taken 

 in 1920, from a clump of beach grass on the fore-dune near 

 Sawyer, September 6 (Hubbell). 



8 Horvath has recently shown (Ann. Mtis. Nat. Hung., 15, p. 378) 

 that Alydus Fabr. 1803 is a strict synonym of Coriscus Schrank 1796, 

 since both were established for the same species. Chnex calcaratus 

 Linn. := Coriscus dauci Schrank. 



