332 CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES [Proc. 47H Ser. 
(on the pronotum an extension of the dark marking in the im- 
pressed area as described for the type) more apparent, with por- 
tions below, and particularly caudad, paler; in one individual 
broadly buff. 
In addition to the type and allotype, a paratypic series of 
three males and two females, bearing the same data, is before 
us as well as a female taken from the stomach of a mockingbird 
on Wenman Island, December 14, 1899. 
TETTIGONIID# (Locustide of authors) 
Four species of katydids are found native on the Galapagos 
Islands. Of these three are peculiar to the islands, and one is 
widely distributed over the American continent as well. 
PHANEROPTERINZE 
21. Anaulocomera darwinii Scudder 
1893. Anaulocomera darwin Scudder, Bull. Mus. Comp. 
LOG XOXV ip, LOS ies. 14 andi oes leo ei Cliatinamna 
Island; Wreck Bay, Chatham Island; Indefatigable Island. | 
At 1100 feet, February 22, 1906, (on grass), 1¢. 
This specimen agrees fully with the type. We would note 
that the male supra-anal plate is triangular, distinctly longer 
than its basal width, and has the dorsal surface moderately 
convex. Meso-ventrad, an elongate, slender shaft (the titil- 
lator?) projects from the anal chamber. This shaft reaches 
half ‘the distance to the furcation of the elongate cerci and 
shows a weak and even upward curvature to its aciculate chitin- 
ous apex. 
PSEUDOPHYLLINZ~Z 
22. Liparoscelis cooksonii ( Butler ) 
1877. Agracia cooksonii Butler, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 
1877, p. 87. [ 2 ; Charles Island; Albemarle Island, both Gala- 
pagos Islands. | | 
1901. Liparoscelis cooksoni ensifer McNeill, Proc. Wash. 
“Acad. oct, UM p. 498) text tie, 39. oo: bicodmcland: Galaq 
pagos Islands. ] 
