FURTHER RESEARCHES ON NORTH AMERICAN ACRIDIID^. 35 



straight. Wings like those of rugosus, the tip infuscated but not mac- 

 ulate. Ground-color of tegmina a pale, almost vinaceous brown; the 

 basal half of the anal field suffused with fuscous except along the anal 

 vein ; the distal half of the costal field more or less suffused and the 

 basal third finely maculate, the proximal part of the discoidal field 

 evenly suffused, the veins and venules of the distal part more or less 

 infuscated apically, and a slight fuscous suffusion near the base. 



1 'Compared with rugosus the specimen differs relatively little struc- 

 turally or in wing-marking, but radically in the tegminal pattern, 

 which suggests that of tuberculatus , but is much less distinct." 



HippiSCUS phoenicopterus Germar. 

 Georgia: Sand Mountain; Trenton. 



Alabama: Cheaha Mountain; Lookout Mountain; Turnipseed's Ranch. 

 Mississippi: Meridian; Nugent. 

 Arkansas: Magazine Mountain; Rich Mountain. 

 Indian Territory: Caddo; Haileyville; Howe. 



In early summer this is the commonest species of the genus from 

 Arkansas eastward. It frequents fields and waste grounds, sometimes 

 entering the more open forests. 



Hippiscus rugosus Scudder. 

 Georgia: (Trenton, juv. 4). 

 Alabama: Anniston (juv. 4, 5) ; (Lookout Mountain, juv. 3) ; McCalla, 



juv. 3, 5). 

 Mississippi: Biloxi (juv. 2); Gulfport; Hattiesburg (juv. 2); Meridian 



(juv. 2) ; Nugent (juv. 4, 5) ; (Tuscaloosa, juv. 2, 3, 4, 5). 

 Arkansas: (Ashdown, juv. 5) ; Blue Mountain Station; Dardanelle (juv. 5) ; 



Fayetteville (juv. 5) ; Magazine Mountain (juv. 4) ; (Rich Mountain, 



juv. 3) ; (Rich Mountain Station, juv. 3) ; Van Buren, Winslow 



(juv. 5). 

 Indian Territory: Caddo (juv. 5) ; Haileyville (juv. 5) ; Howe (juv. 3, 4, 



5) ; South McAlester (juv. 5) ; Wilburton. 



Texas: Amarillo; Bonita; Clarendon; Denison; Quanah; Wichita Falls. 

 Oklahoma: Cache; Mountain Park; Shawnee; base and summit of Mount 



Sheridan. 



A very common and widely distributed species, often abundant 

 locally. 



Hippiscus saussurei Scudder. 



Texas: Amarillo; Bonita; Wichita Falls. 



Two males and two females from open weedy fields. A very large, 

 active, and exceedingly wary locust. 



