CATALOGUE OF INSECTS. 709 



Delaware "Water G-ap, Warren County. This locality means the shore of 

 the Delaware, opposite the Pennsylvania town of that name, extending 

 along the base of the mountains on the New Jersey side and along the 

 carriage and railroad in both directions. The country is rocky and 

 broken, with plenty of water in ordinary seasons and numerous flowers, 

 Ceanothus, Spiremes, etc. Several collectors have cited the place, but 

 more species have been taken by Mr. C. W. Johnson than any one else. 

 My own collections here are very limited in extent. 



Dover, Morris County. A hilly country with wooded slopes and valleys, in 

 which are more or less rapid brooks. A good country for collecting. 



Dunker Pond, Passaic County, about six miles a little south of east of Frank- 

 lin ; elevation a little over 1,000 feet. 



Dunellen, Union County. At the base of the Orange Mountains, west of Plain- 

 field ; a good rolling country, rising to the north with swamp, brooks 

 and woodland in the vicinity. 



Dunnfield, Warren County : most generally cited with the Delaware Water 

 Gap. The collecting here was all done along the line of Dunnfield Creek 

 and along the sides of Mt. Tammany, in the open glades and along the 

 rocky banks and bed of the creek. Mr. Johnsou has given most of the 

 citations here. 



Eagle Rock. A prominent point on the first ridge of the Orange Mountains, 

 west of Montclair, Essex County ; well wooded in the vicinity. 



Echo Lake, Passaic County — Macopin Lake : q. v. 



Egg Harbor City, Atlantic County. Gravelly and a little rolling to the 

 north, sandy and more level to the south : much fruit and vineyards, but 

 also much pine and scrub land, with the usual admixture of swamp vege- 

 tation. 



Eldora, Cape May County. Ten miles northwest from Cape May C. H. ; ten 

 miles southwest from Tuckahoe ; at the edge of the pines, tending 

 toward the Bay Shore marshes. 



Elizabeth, Union County. Marshy meadowland toward the shore and along 

 it ; cultivated, and ridges to the north and west, with low, mostly decidu- 

 ous woodland. 



Englewood, Bergen County. On the west slope of the Palisades. Several 



small creeks in the vicinity, forming ponds. 

 Englishtown, Monmouth County, four miles northwest of Freehold. Rather 



hilly or rolling, with deciduous and some coniferous woodland. 

 Fairmount Cemetery. On the banks of the Hackensack, Bergen County, 



near Hackensack. 

 Farmingdale, Monmouth County, about seven miles southeast of Freehold. 



A flat, scrubby country, with two small streams near by, along which are 



cranberry bogs. 

 Flatbush, Long Island ; several times cited for species whose occurrence in 



New Jersey is practically certain. 

 Forest Hill, Essex County. On the Second River, just north of Newark. 



Hemlocks mostly, with a sprinkling of oak, chestnut and beech. 



