308 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [July, ’12 
Cerambycidae from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and 
vicinity, with notes (Coleop.).* 
By W: S. Fisner and H.B. Kirk, Harnsburg, Pa. 
Having accumulated notes and data on collecting and rear- 
ing longhorn beetles, we give the results, thinking they may be 
of some interest to others. 
The region about Harrisburg is quite variable, affording a 
great variety of food plants. Here and there are small groves 
of dying hickory trees which are ideal for night collecting, 
and on the mountain sides along the edge of woods are patches 
of wild hydrangea, rose and Jersey tea. When these plants are 
in bloom, they are visited by a number of species, especially 
the tribe Lepturini, and on a warm day the blossoms are 
swarming with insects feeding on the pollen. Near Harrisburg 
a pipe line has been laid across the mountains and the trees 
have been cut down for a number of feet on each side of this 
line, leaving an open space through the dense woods. A great 
many insects are attracted to this open space from the sur- 
rounding woodlands and are found during the warm part of 
the day swarming over the blossoms, or nesting on the upper 
side of the leaves, apparently indulging in the luxury of a sun 
bath. 
A great deal of our collecting was done in the usual way, by 
sweeping flowers and beating dead branches, but the most in- 
teresting was the collecting at night with an acetylene light. 
A number of the species that are seldom taken during the day 
time, and which seem apparently rare, were secured in numbers 
by this method of collecting. Some of the species were found 
running up and down the tree trunks, while others were ovi- 
positing in the dying trees. When the light was thrown on 
the tree trunks, the insects on them would remain motionless 
until the light was removed, when a slight touch would cause 
them to fall into the cyanide bottle. 
During the early months when the ground was still frozen 
*Contributions from the Division of Zoology, Dept. of Agriculture, 
Harrisburg, Pa. 
