Hebard—Dermaptera and Orthoptera of Hawaii 309 
species has been introduced in Hawaii. Further knowledge of the 
Asiatic, Austro-Malayan, and Papuan faunas is needed before the 
probable origin of the other species can be determined. At the 
present time, eferonoma and perkinsi are known only from Hawaii- 
an material.’ 
Anisolabis eteronoma Borelli 
1909. Anisolabis eteronoma Borelli, Boll. Lab. Zool. Scuola 
oreeomicire lil =p. 305. (o,? > Hilo hawat| 
1882. Anisolabis littorea Bormans (not Forficula littorea 
White, 1874), Ann. Mus. Civ. Stor. Nat. Genova, XVIII, 
p. 339. [Oahu; Haleakala, Maui.?] 
Hilo, Hawaii, VII, 1918, (U. S. Inspector), 1 ¢ , [Hebard Coll.]. 
Kohala, tlawaii, WV, 20, 1907, (O: El. Swezey), 19, [Heb= 
ard Coll.]. 
Monit tantalus, Oahu, (CO: El. Swezey), 12%. [H. S: Pi A]; 
iy tO.) (keane Kusche). 21, [Bishop Musa; V,, 26, 
1919, (J. A. Kusche), 19, [Hebard Coll.]. 
Paton midse, Oahu, V, 20, 1919, (), AL Kusche)), 1, [pleb= 
ard Coll |: 
Bormans found that the Hawaiian material he had recorded 
agreed absolutely with the description of littorea except in size. By 
comparing his description and measurements with the material in 
hand, with the description and figure given by White and with a 
pair of littorea from New Zealand, kindly loaned to us by the Paris 
Museum, the Hawaiian insects are seen to be not only smaller than 
littorea but to differ further in the proportionately longer forceps, 
annulate antennae and male forceps which lack an abrupt proximo- 
internal flange. There does not appear to be the slightest possi- 
*Three specimens, in addition to those recorded, are before us, show- 
ing the presence in Hawaii of at least one more species belonging to the 
genus. It is possible that these specimens represent one or two undescribed 
species, but without more material representing both sexes, further com- 
ment on them seems inadvisable. 
*These records have subsequently been published by Brunner and 
Perkins. 
ya 
