54 NATURAL HISTORY BULLETIN 



265 feet below sea level, August; Peach Springs, Arizona. Oceurs also in 

 Nevada. The specimens from St. George were secured by beating thick 

 clumps of desert shrubs on the flats near the Virgin River, those from Salton 

 were concealed about the roots of weeds in a little draw leading down to 

 the Salton Sea. 



C. TEXANA Gorh. Burnet County, Texas. 



C. UNDULATA Say. Iowa City, Iowa, Oct. 7; Independence, Iowa; Onaga, 

 Kansas, June 26 and July 16; Malcolm, Nebraska, July 17; Crescent City, 

 Florida, April. Known to occur in North Carolina, Maryland, District of 

 Columbia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, 

 Arkansas, Texas and Arizona. Mr. C. A. Frost Avrites that it has been 

 bred from Ampeloysis quinquefoUa by H. B. Kirk. 



C. BALTEATA Lec. Brownsville, Harwood and New Braunfels, Texas, July. 

 Lives in Mississippi, Alabama and California. 



C. ANGUSTATA Spin. Los Angeles County, California. Found also in 

 Mexico. 



C. oviPENNis Lec. Los Angeles County and Tehachapi, California. 

 Known from New Mexico and Arizona, and perhaps from Missouri, though 

 the locality label for the last specimen may be in error. 



Tribe II. Clerini. 



Priocera Kirhy. 



P. CASTANEA Neicm. Hey worth, Illinois; Allegheny, Pennsylvania; Spring 

 Hill, Alabama, May 17. Distributed through Florida, North and South Caro- 

 lina, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Kansas and Canada. 



Derestenus Chevr. 



D. FURCATUS Schaef. Brownsville, Texas, July 10. 



Thanasimus Latreille. 



T. TRIFASCIATUS Say. Bayfield, Wisconsin. Known from Vermont, Penn- 

 sylvania and Canada. 



T. DUBius Fabr. Durham, New Hampshire; Chicopee, Massachusetts; Mt. 

 Katahdin, Maine, 5000 feet, June 29. Known to occur in Louisiana, New 

 York, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Canada and 

 Mexico. 



T. UNDATULUS Say. Livingston, Montana, July 14. Found in New Hamp- 

 shire, Minnesota, Colorado, New Mexico and Ontario. 



