Erkliiruntf ilor Oitli.>|.t.'tvn-T;il'.'ln .1. C. SuvitfiiyV in ilor J)oscri|.tiori <1<- ri\pypto u . 24: > 



(rryllus < (h'ifllodiljxi ) ( oplitHs ( „alar nhdoniinc \m "riorcs, miffustac"). 



Fig. 8. I><" Haa n, p. 225 und 2:57. 

 Gnjllotalpa Cophta. Fijr. S N . Scudder, 1. p. 18. 



vulgaris ?ar. Cophta, „alis breviter caudatis". Fig. 3. 

 Saussure, 2, Tonio II, ]>. 196. 

 — vulgaris. Fig. 3. Brunn er. 3, S. 452. 

 Bondder beschreibt die Figuren folgendennassen: „Ocelli of medium size, 

 obovate, each distanl from the adjacent eye by its own smaller diameter, and 

 froin the other ooellns by about fcwiee its longer diameter, directed toward the 

 lower edge of the opposite eye. Fore trochanter probably cultrate (one of 

 Savigny's drawings appears to represent it as lenticular), the upper edgc a 

 little eoneave, the lower strongly convex. The movable and the Upper iinmovable 

 tibial daetyls eurved slightly downwards, the lower iinmovable one triangulär. 

 Lateral daetyls of tarsi cultrate and similar, the second somewhat slenderer and 

 more than half the length of the first. Acicular claws pointed, short, equalling 

 the breadth of the second lateral daetyl. Inner hinder edge of terminal half of 

 bind tibiae with four large spines, inner edge of apex with as many more of 

 equal length, outer edge of apex with three or four shorter ones. Claws of the 

 bind tarsi fully three fourths as long as the terminal tarsal joint, Tegmina in 

 repose covering only the first two (?) abdominal segments and reaching the 

 middle of the bind femora. Wings reaching the middle of the seventh abdominal 

 segment. Terminal abdominal segments not figured as furnished with longitudinal 

 rows of hairs. Anal cerci equalling or nearly equalling the length of the 

 pronotum". 



Bezüglich des eigenthümlichen gestielten Knöpfchens, das Fig. 3. 2. b nach 

 aussen von den Tarsenklauen zeigt, bemerkt Saussure: „La figure represente, 

 sous les griffes du 3 me article du tarse anterieur, un petit appendice en forme de 

 massue que nous n'avons pu retrouver chez aueune espece, et dont nous ne com- 

 prenons pas la signification". 



Die Varietät der Maulwurfsgrille mit abgekürzten Hinterflügeln findet sich 

 nach Brunner in Süditalien (Brindisi). Sicilien, Rhodos, Algerien und Egypten. 



Fig. 4. Gryllus bimaculatus de Geer (1773). 



Fig. 4. 1. (j? , von oben, mit ausgespannten Flügeln (nat. Gr.). Hiezu Kopf A, 

 Antenne j, Mundtheile a, i, 0, u, u~ und Tarsus d. 



Fig. 4. 2. 9 , von der Seite, mit fast völlig ungefleckten Elytra (nat. Gr.). 



Fig. 4. 3. 9 > von oben, mit ausgespannten Flügeln und normal gefleckten 

 Elytra (nat. Gr.). 

 Gryllus capensis F. Fig. 4. Burmeister, 1, S. 735. 



— — Fig. 4. De Haan, p. 222, 223, 225. 



— — Fig. 4. Lucas, p. 21. 



— — Fig. 4. Fischer Fr., p. 182. 



— — Fig. 4. cf, 9. Saussure, 3. p. 32. 



