2(;r, 



INVERTEBRATE FAUNA OF SOUTH CAROLINA. 



It will be noticed that where a species is recorded from an adjoining 

 State, rendering it highly probable that it also occurs in South Carolina, 

 the State is entered after the specific name in parenthesis. The species 

 is recorded without remark (1), Avhen it has been collected within the 

 confines of the State ; (2), when, as is frequently the case, it has been 

 collected at Savannah, just across the border line; and (3), where it has 

 been recorded both from North Carolina and Georgia, or from ^''irginia 

 and Georgia, as, in such case, it is almost certain to be also found in 

 South Carolina. 



With the Class Insecta, a comi:)lete list would swell this work for be- 

 yond its practical recjuirements. I shall, therefore, confine myself to the 

 enumeration of the principal species which are injurious to vegetation, 

 or which are beneficial through their direct products, or from the fact 

 that they prey upon or are parasites upon injurious species. This enu- 

 meration is supplemented, however, by a list of such works as the student 

 will find useful in filling out gaps. In this list no works are mentioned 

 which do not bear upon the geographical distribution of the species. 



LELAXD 0. HOWARD. 



AVashington, October 22, 1882. 



SUB-KINGDOM ANNULOSA. 

 CLASS INSECTA. 



[Air breathinc; articulates, with three regions (head, thorax and abdomen), six 

 legs, and usuallj' wings.] 



LIST OF WORKS. 



BoiSDUV.\L AND LeConte — Histoire General 

 et Iconographie des Lepidopteres et 

 des Chenilles de TAmerique Septen- 

 trionale, Paris, 1833. 



Cresson, E. T. — Xotes on the Species be- 

 longing to the sub family Ichneumon- 

 ides found in America, north of Mexico. 

 Trans. Am. Entomological Soc, 1877. 



CoMSTOCK, J. H. — Report on Scale Insects. \ Edwarps, W. H.— The Butterflies of North 

 An. Rept. U. S. Dept. Agric, 1880. j America. Bo.ston, 1879. 



Cresson, E. T. — Catalogue of the described [ Glover, T. — Manuscript Notes from my 



species of several families of Hymenop- 

 tera inhabiting North America. Proc. 

 Entomological Society Philailelphia, 

 1801 -CO. 



Journal — Hemiptera AVashington, 

 187(). (Onl}' a few copies printed from 

 stone for private distribution.) 



