718 STATE BOAED OF AGRICULTURE. 



South Amboy, Middlesex County. Marsh and scrub-land, sandy, but with 

 gravelly hills wooded with evergreen and deciduous, low, scrub-like trees 

 and bushes. Offers quite diverse collecting grounds. 



South Jersey. Means usually the pine barrens and maritime region, embrac- 

 ing roughly the territory south of the West Jersey and Seashore R. R. 



South River, Middlesex County. Means the territory between Milltown and 

 South river along the line of the trolley and usually the swampy wood- 

 land. 



Sparta, Sussex County. On the Wallkill river, elevation about 650 feet, 

 rising on all sides, four miles northeast from the head of Lake Hopat- 

 cong. 



Spotswood, Middlesex County. A little northeast of Jamesburg and much 

 like it in general character, except that there is not so much woodland. 



Spring Lake, Monmouth County. Belongs to the maritime district ; diver- 

 sified with swamp, lake, marsh and scrub land ; some pine and deciduous 

 trees. 



Staten Island, Richmond County, New York. Belongs geographically to 

 New Jersey, forming the northern and western shores of Raritan bay. 

 The country is varied, and the locality as cited gives no clue as to the 

 character of the surroundings where the species was taken. 



Suffern, New York. Just across the State line on the Krie R. R. A hilly 

 stony country with wooded slopes and rapid streams in the valleys. 

 Some of the New York entomologists have collected here, their excur- 

 sions not infrequently extending across the State boundary, where the 

 fauna is exactly similar. 



Summit, Union County. Well up in the Orange Mountains, with deciduous 

 woodland and plenty of small streams in the valleys and gullies. 



Swartswood Lake, Sussex County, four miles westerly from Newton. 

 Elevation 480, rising from all sides in slopes covered with wood land and 

 cut with rocky streams. 



Swedesboro, Gloucester County. Well cultivated truck and fruit land, level 

 or slightly rolling with a little swamp to the northwest and a little 

 deciduous woodland. 



Swinefield Bridge, Morris County. On the Passaic River, at the edge of 

 the Hatfield Swamp, about ten miles northwest from Newark. 



Tenafly, Bergen County. On the west slope of the Palisades, about two miles 

 north of Englewood. 



Three States Point. At the end of a narrow spit of land extending into the 

 Delaware just south of Port Jervis ; practically the junction of N. 

 Y., N. J., and Penn. 



Timber Creek, empties into the Delaware, about five miles south of Camden, 

 and forms part of the division between Camden and Gloucester Counties : 

 mostly with low, marshy banks. 



Toms River, Ocean County ; a short distance west from Barnegat Bay. Sand 

 and scrub land with occasional taller wood land, marshy along the river 



