1)1 



fi(-i;il means, surli as with prOvisiO >'iildintf timber, ball.: 



ing plants; many of these irenearl Second, 



specie^ thai have arrived in the i-land-. and km- become DUMTC <>r le 

 completely naturali/cd; they arc most <>f them known to he wood- Of 

 kirk beetles, but *ome that arc nl BO may km- < oinc with the 

 adhering to the rootfl >f floating 1 1 -uch U the I)yti~< id 



water beetles, may possibly have been introduced by violent \\ind-. 

 Third, after making every allowance for introduction by these artifu ial 

 and natural methods, there still remains a lar^e portion standing out 

 in striking contrast with the others, which we arc justified in considering 

 strictly endemic or autochthonous." Among the introduced genera are 

 ;;<//(/. Dcrmcstes, Aphodius, Buprcstis, Ptinus and Cerambyx. The 

 immigrant longicorns appear to have been derived "from the nearest 

 lands in various directions" the Philippine Islands, tropical Am- 

 and the Polynesian Islands and the same conclusion will probably be 

 found to hold for the other immigrants, when their general distribution 

 shall have been sufficiently studied. The endemic species number 214, 

 or exactly half the total number of species, and are distributed among 9 

 families, as follows: 



FAMILIES. SPECIES. GENERA. ENDEMIC 



GENERA. 



Carabidae 51 7 7 



Staphylinidae 19 3 i 



Nitidulidae 38 2 i 



Elateridae 7 i i 



Ptinidas (Anobiini) 19 3 3 



Cioidae 19 i o 



Aglycyderidae 30 i i 



Curculionidae (Cossonini) 21 3 3 



Cerambycidae 10 i i 



Sharp writes: "I think it may be looked on as certain that these 

 islands are the home of a large number of peculiar species not at present 

 existing elsewhere, and if so it follows that either they must have existed 

 formerly elsewhere and migrated to the islands, and since have become 

 extinct in their original homes, or that they must have been produced 

 within the islands. This last seems the simpler and more probable sup- 

 position, and it appears highly probable that there has been a large 

 amount of endemic evolution within the limits of these isolated islands." 



The parasitic Hymenoptera of Hawaii, according to Ashmead, num- 

 ber 14 families, 69 genera and 128 species; only eleven genera are en- 

 demic and most of the other genera are represented in nearly all the 



