114 
Psyche 
[ September 
Academy of Sciences collected by Michelbacher and Ross, 
from 10 mi. N.W. of LaPaz, Oct. 6, 1941 ; Arroyo Seco, Oct. 
6; San Venancio, Oct. 8; and Agua Caliente, Cape Region, 
Oct. 18. It is thus far known only from the southern pcirt 
of the peninsula. 
New^ England Records of Ululodes Currie (Neurop- 
TERA: Ascalaphidae) . — There are few records of the two 
indigenous species of Ululodes from the northeastern corner 
of the United States. The genus is not mentioned in 
Procter’s Biological Survey of the Mount Desert Region 
[Maine], Part VII, 1946, nor is it recorded by Johnson in 
his Insects of Nantucket, 1930, or by Britton in the Check- 
List of the Insects of Connecticut, 1920 and 1938. There 
is only one citation in Leonard’s List of the Insects of New 
York, 1926; and this is of U. quadri punctata from Staten 
Island, in the extreme southeast. Records of both species 
are more plentiful in Smith’s Insects of New Jersey, 1910, 
and Brimley’s Insects of North Carolina, 1938; the former 
work citing two localities for U. hyalina and five for U . 
quadripunctata, and the latter, four and two localities for 
these species, respectively. 
Inasmuch as they represent extensions of the known 
ranges of both species, the following records from the 
author’s collections are presented herewith, even though 
lacking such desirable data as precise locality and year of 
collection : Ululodes hyalina Latr., Marthas Vineyard, Mas- 
sachusetts, 19 July, 1 specimen at light. Uhdodes quadri- 
punctata Burm., Marthas Vineyard, Mass., 2 Augu.st, 1 
specimen at light; New London, Connecticut, July-August. 
1948, 1 specimen. In all cases, poor condition precludes de- 
termination of sex of these specimens. The author will 
gratefully receive any records or specimens of Ululodes 
from the northeastern United States. — George H. Beatty, 
III, Plumsteadville, Pennsylvania. 
