230 NATURAL HISTORY BULLETIN. 



idad, collected in May by Prof. Gillette which might possibly belong 

 here, but seems to me more like a slightly abnormal repanda. 



C. PUSIEEA Say. Colorado, Ulke. Buena Vista, July, Wickham. In a 

 swarm of Cicindelas taken at the place mentioned, I found a great 

 variety of forms running from pusilla to cinclipennis . 



C. cinctipennis Lee. Buena Vista and Leadville, Wickham; Horsefly 

 Peak Divide, July; Fort Collins, June, specimen of the green variety. 



C. puncttjeaTA Fabr. Fort Collins; Denver, July, August, September; 

 Garden of the Gods, Packard; Clear Creek Canon, Uhler; San Luis Val- 

 ley, La Junta, Durango, Hay ward; Colorado Springs, Pike's Peak, 

 9,000-10,000 feet, Wickham. 



C. micans Fabr. Red Creek, Custer Co., Cockerell; La Junta, June, Hay- 

 ward; Denver and Colorado Springs, Wickham. 



C. macra Lee. " This species and sperata Lee, will undoubtedly, occur in 

 Colorado, as I have them from a few miles south of the southern 

 boundary" (Bowditch). 



C. eepida Dej. Colorado, Leng and Beutenmueller, Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc, 

 H, p. 95- 



C. hemorrhagica Lee. Colorado, Ulke. 



CARABID^B. 



Omophron americanum Dej. Bellevue, May; Berkeley; La Veta. 



O. TESSEELATUM Say. Fort Collins, at light, July. 



Trachypachys inermis Mots. Argentine Pass, Bowditch; Ouray; Veta 

 Pass; West Cliff; Breckenridge, in moss under log. 



Cychrus EEEVATUS Fab. Reported from Colorado by Ulke, (coll. Carpen- 

 ter) and by Leconte; Fort Collins, Wm. Fairfield, June; Engelmann's 

 Canon. 



C. snowi Lee. Durango, Bowditch and Hayward. 



Carabus meander Fisch. West Cliff. 



C. T^EDATUS Fabr. This species and its varieties occur at many points in 

 the state, but it seems likely that different recorders have carried their 

 determinations to different grades of completeness. Under the name 

 tcedatus, we find the following localities: — Above 12,000 feet, Carpen- 

 ter; Dome Rock; West Cliff; Kelso's Cabin, foot of Gray's Peak; Idaho 

 Springs, Packard; Wales Canon, Pueblo Co., Cockerell; Plains south 

 of Denver and Roaring Fork, Ulke; Argentine Pass, 13,000 feet, Bow- 

 ditch; Elk River, ten miles north of Steamboat Springs, Baker; vicinity 

 of Fort Collins, April, May, July and August; Little Willow Creek; 

 Canon of Big Blue; Rico; Upper San Juan; Summitville; Mountains 

 southwest of Montrose; South Park. For the variety agassii we have 

 Leconte's record, Southern Colorado, and Putnam's record, with Ulke 

 as authority. The localities credited with oregonensis are: Rist Canon, 

 June; Silver Plume; Leavenworth Valley (above Georgetown), 10,000 

 to 11,000 feet; Argentine Road and Argentine Pass, 12,000 to 13,500 

 feet; Georgetown; Ouray; Buena Vista, wooded bottoms; Leadville, 

 along mountain streams; Moose Mountain (near Leadville), above tim- 

 ber line; Breckenridge, in deep woods. 



