﻿THE 
  INSECTS 
  OF 
  NEW 
  JERSEY. 
  

  

  313 
  

  

  probus 
  G«rm. 
  Lakehurst 
  V, 
  IX 
  (div) 
  ; 
  some 
  of 
  the 
  records 
  for 
  

   "lecontei" 
  probably 
  refer 
  to 
  this 
  species; 
  Mr. 
  Schaeffer 
  thinks 
  all 
  do. 
  

  

  vigilans 
  Lee. 
  Weehawken 
  VI 
  (Bt) 
  ; 
  Atlantic 
  Co. 
  (W) 
  ; 
  seashore 
  (Li); 
  

   rare. 
  

  

  lasvis 
  Dru. 
  Common 
  throughout 
  the 
  State. 
  

  

  chalcites 
  Hald. 
  New 
  Jersey 
  (Lg), 
  and 
  probably 
  g. 
  d.; 
  rare. 
  

  

  viridis 
  Beauv. 
  Staten 
  Island 
  IV, 
  VIII 
  (div); 
  Atlantic 
  City 
  (Li), 
  

  

  CHCERIDIUM 
  Lap. 
  

   C. 
  histeroides 
  Web. 
  Lakehurst 
  VII, 
  IX 
  (div); 
  Woodbury 
  VII 
  (W) 
  

  

  Costa 
  VI, 
  VII 
  (div); 
  Atco 
  (Li); 
  Petersburg 
  VII, 
  4 
  (Brn) 
  

   ment 
  and 
  fungi. 
  

   C. 
  lecontei 
  Harold. 
  DaCosta 
  VI, 
  2 
  (GG). 
  

  

  Da- 
  

   rn 
  excre- 
  

  

  COPRIS 
  Geoff. 
  

  

  C. 
  minutus 
  Dru. 
  Throughout 
  the 
  State 
  IV-IX; 
  locally 
  common 
  in 
  cow- 
  

   dung; 
  all 
  the 
  species 
  with 
  the 
  habit 
  of 
  digging 
  under 
  droppings. 
  

  

  C. 
  anagiypticus 
  Say. 
  Throughout 
  the 
  State; 
  common, 
  spring 
  and 
  fall. 
  

  

  C. 
  Carolina 
  Linn. 
  Our 
  largest 
  species; 
  less 
  common, 
  but 
  as 
  widely 
  dis- 
  

   tributed 
  as 
  the 
  preceding. 
  

  

  -A 
  "tumble-bug," 
  Copris 
  Carolina: 
  a, 
  larva; 
  h, 
  the 
  cell 
  in 
  which 
  

   it 
  lived; 
  c, 
  pupa; 
  d, 
  female 
  beetle. 
  

   I'ig. 
  1-5- 
  

  

  PHAN/EUS 
  MacL. 
  

   P. 
  carnifex 
  Linn. 
  Throughout 
  the 
  State; 
  locally 
  common; 
  spring 
  and 
  

   fall; 
  one 
  of 
  the 
  few 
  species 
  attracted 
  to 
  human 
  excrement. 
  

  

  