374 Occasional Papers Bernice P. Bishop Museum 
Upper Hamakua Ditch Trail, Kohala Mountains, Hawai, IX, 
3, toro, (©. H. Swezey; om Cibotum)> 227 (Le ©. epeAP ane 
Hebard Coll.]. 
Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, 4000 feet, VII, 24, 1906, (W. M. 
Giffard); 1¢, 12: I, 15, (W.-M Giffard), juvee =e 
M: Giffard), 1¢., [Yerr Bd Agr. and~ Elebard= Coll: 
Keanae, Maui, VII, 16; 1920; (O: Hi Swezey), 297s 
PA. and Hebard Coll\: 
@paeula Valley, Oahu, 11, 30, 1913, (Os, Ba Swezey) aus 
| Hebard Coll. ]. 
Mount Tantalus, Oahu, 1300 feet, X, 27, 1906, (W. M. Gif- 
fard), 16,29 ; 1500 feet, I, 30 and XI, 10, 1906, (W2 MM. Gittard): 
td), 2.0) | herr. Bde Ace wand iElebard Colla? 
Waialae Iki, Oahu, V, 2, 1920, (O. H. Swezey), 14, [Hebard 
Coll. ]. 
The above series, like that recorded under forficularis, includes 
a variety of forms, which we do not believe should be given either 
specific or racial status at the present time. 
All have much longer legs than the series of forficularis, and 
in none are these members more than very faintly annulate. No 
trace of annuli is shown in the series from Niulii, Hawaii, Mount 
Tantalus, and Waialae Iki, Oahu, the adult from the latter locality 
only having the tibiae almost black. Were such color differences 
worthy of name, that specimen would, from the description, be 
considered quite as distinct as Perkins’s apicalis. 
In tegminal development the material of both sexes from Niu- 
lii, Hawaii, Mount Tantalus, and Waialae Iki, Oahu, has these or- 
gans completely covering the metanotum, that segment greatly spe- 
cialized as shown on Plate 11, figure 12. Those from Keanae, Maui, 
show further tegminal reduction, in that these organs overlap, but 
reach and cover only the proximal portion of the metanotum; the 
metanotum, apparently as a result, showing depressions but no 
conspicuous specialization. The female from Opaeula Valley, 
Oahu, has the tegmina lateral but separated by an interval less than 
BA 
