2 University of Michigan 



adnlt male and was found dead on the mud in a dried-up pond 

 near Vermilion, on August 17. 



As elsewhere stated-' hut a single si)ecimcn of Sonw 

 ■richardsonii Bachman has been recorded from Michigan. This 

 specimen was taken in Alger County and is now in the collec- 

 tion of the Michigan Agricultural College. A second specimen 

 was secured by the writer at Vermilion, Chippewa County, on 

 July 26, 1914. The habitat of this specimen is unknown as it 

 was brought to the camp by a house cat. 



The only specimens of Pityniys pinetoriim scalopsoides 

 (Audubon and Bachman) which have been recorded from 

 Michigan are the two from Ingham County and one from 

 Oakland County reported by the writer" in 1913. A fourth 

 specimen, an adult female taken August 2, 1910, at Bay View, 

 Emmet County, has been presented to the Museum jjy iNIr. 

 Ernest Thompson Seton. This is the most northern record 

 for the state, and extends the known range to the northern end 

 of the lower peninsula. 



3 Wood, Non:ian A. Science, N. S., XXXV'II, p. 522-523. 



