Vou. Il, Pr. II] HEBARD—DERMAPTERA AND ORTHOPTERA 315 
1. Anisopygia snodgrassii (McNeill) 
1901. Temnopteryx snodgrassii McNeill, Proc. Wash. 
Acad. Sci, (il p. 493, fies. 35 to 37) 13, 2, juv.; Albemarle 
Island, Galapagos Islands. ] 
The present insect is readily distinguished from jocosiclunts, 
as well as from the Mexican species we have discussed above, 
by its solid coloration, nearly rectangulate tegmina with angles 
rounded and distinctive specialization of the male supra-anal 
plate. 
It appears that McNeill had five specimens before him at the 
time of original description, though at the end of his diagnosis 
the adult male was not recorded. The series now before us 
includes one adult male, so recently emerged that it had not 
become chitinized, one adult female and three immature 
females, all taken on Albemarle Island, June 9, 1899. We here 
select the adult female as single type, the adult male as allotype; 
both the property of the Leland Stanford Junior University. 
McNeill’s figure 37 is extremely sketchy and inaccurate. We 
have consequently given an outline of the distal portion of the 
abdomen in this male, figure 1. 
Fig. 1—Anisopygia snodgrassu (McNeill). Dorsal outline of distal 
portion of male abdomen. Allotype. Albemarle Island, Galapagos Islands. 
(X 6) 
2. Blattella germanica (Linnzus) 
1767. [Blatta] germanica Linneus, Syst. Nat., ed. XII, I, 
p. 668. [Denmark. | 
Hood Island,.June 1, 1906,12. 
This cosmopolitan domiciliary species has become widely 
established through North and South America. 
