350 Occasional Papers Bernice P. Bishop Museum 
Hawaii and has usually been reported from this region under the 
synonymic name immnotabilis. 
Saussure states that its range is widespread in Oceania and 
that it occurs also in Borneo and Japan. One female taken at 
Sapporo, Japan, is in the collections of the Philadelphia Academy. 
Like the Japanese material recorded by Saussure, it is darker than 
the usual type but can be matched by the Hawaiian specimens 
before us showing the maximum intensification of coloration. 
Gryllus conspersus Schaum 
1862. Gryllus conspersus Schaum, in Peters, Reise nach 
Mozambique, V, p. 117. [ 2, Mozambique. | 
Mount Tantalus, Oahu, XII, 11, 1904, (©. Hl. Swezey): 
té, [H.-S. PLA. -175,2and.- 8; 1910; (G)scnee ace 
392, [Bishop Mus.]. 
Honolulu Plantation, Oahu, xX; 23) 1014) id 1 Oe ater 
Coll. ]. 
Niu. Valley, Oahu, (©: H. Swezey), 125 aes. Pale 
Koko Crater, Oahu, (©) Hl. Swezey), 19, [plebardwColiale 
Kauai, Lil, 26 te AV; £1, 1910, (ja AS Kusche)Rocmerenar 
3. juv., | Hebard Coll.) 
Kokee, Kauai, II, 1919, (J. A. Kusche), -4¢, 39, [Bishop 
Mus. |. 
This species has not previously been recorded from Hawaii. 
It has been recorded by Saussure from Africa, Mozambique and 
the East Indies, and by Shiraki from Formosa. One specimen 
before us in the Hebard Collection is from the Loo Choo Islands 
of Japan. 
The insect may be readily distinguished from G. oceanicus 
Le Guillou, the other introduced species of the genus in Hawaii, 
by its decidedly smaller size, head with a narrow but conspicuous 
transverse buffy line between the ocelli, the vertex in some speci- 
mens showing a transverse buff band, and by the more widely 
separated and sinuate veins of the lateral fields of the tegmina. 
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