Centipede Subfamily Plutoniuminae 77 



Stanislaus County, California, and the southern Great Basin in southern 

 Nevada and southwestern Utah to southern Sonora and northern Baja 

 California Norte, Mexico. The eastern area represents a slight modification 

 of that showed previously (Shelley 1990a, Fig. 4), which did not include 

 Connecticut and New York (Figs. 11-12), and the Stanislaus County 

 record extends the range significantly northward in western California. 

 In the following locality listing, general range statements, cited 

 from the literature where appropriate, are presented for each state before 

 detailed data. Counties of occurrence of the eastern population are 

 listed alphabetically for states where the centipede has been taken from 

 five or more counties; full locality data are presented for states where 

 less than five counties are represented. The most peripheral record(s) 

 are cited in detail for states forming range boundaries, even when 

 the centipede is common and only counties are listed. Locality data 

 for the southwestern population presented in Shelley (1990a) are also 

 summarized by county; new sites for this population obtained since 

 that paper was published are detailed. 



EASTERN POPULATION 



CONNECTICUT: Expected in the western 2/3 of the state, but 

 only one record. Tolland Co., Mansfield, 1 spmn., June 1965, collector 

 unknown (UCT). 



NEW YORK: Expected in the southernmost section, south of Catskills, 

 but only one record; may be absent from Long Island. Sullivan Co., 

 4.8 km (3 mi) N Bruce, 1 spmn., 22 May 1968, S. B. Peck (NCSM). 



NEW JERSEY: Expected in the northern 1/3 of state, but no 

 available records. 



PENNSYLVANIA: Expected in the east and south, but only, one 

 definite record. Allegheny Co., Sewickly, 3 spmns., date unknown, 

 W. L. Walker (NMNH). 



INDIANA: Apparently common in the southern third with one 

 northern record, from the northeastern corner, that is somewhat disjunct 

 and needs confirmation. Brown, Crawford, Franklin, Jefferson, Monroe, 

 and Noble counties (ANSP, NMNH). Northernmost record: Noble Co., 

 Indian Village Lake, 1 spmn., date unknown, B. G. Owens (NMNH). 



ILLINOIS: Known only from the southern periphery; the northernmost 

 record is from Pulaski County (Summers et al. 1980). Gallatin Co., 

 Shawneetown, 2 spmns., 23 June 1950, M. W. Sanderson (INHS). Hardin 

 Co., Cave in Rock, 1 spmn., 2 May 1956, L. J. Stannard (INHS). Pope 

 Co., Eddyville, 1 spmn., 1 May 1953, L. J. Stannard (INHS); and 3.2 

 km (2 mi) N Dixon Springs, 1 spmn., 1 May 1969, collector unknown 

 (EIU). Johnson Co., Bellsmith Springs E of Ozark, 1 spmn., 24 June 



