76 
Journal New York Entomological Society. 
[Vol. IV. 
Megaderus bifasciatus Dup. —Has been taken from cedar 
timber in Texas. 
Tragidion coquus Linn .—Bores in oak. 
Tragidion armatum Lee. —Breeds in the flower stalks of Yucca 
angustifolia (Townsend). 
Purpuricenus humeralis Fabr. —Lives in oak stumps. 
Sch izax senax Lee. —Lives in dead wood of apricot. 
Stenophenus notatus Oliv. —Breeds in dead hickory limbs. 
Cyllene antennatus White. —Lives in the wood of mesquite in 
Arizona. 
Cyllene picta Drury. —Bores in the solid wood under the bark of 
hickory, walnut, butternut and occasionally in the honey-locust 
( Gleditschia ). 
Cjdlene robinae Forst .—Very destructive to the trunks of locust. 
Cyllene crinicornis Chev. —Has been taken in Texas on syca¬ 
more ( Platanus ), in the wood of which the species probably breeds. 
Plagionotus speciosus Say. —Lives in the solid wood of sugar 
maple. 
Calloides nobilis Say. —Breeds in chestnut and oak trees; also 
beaten from hickory by Mr. Joutel. 
Arhopalus fulminans Fabr. —Bores in the sap wood of chestnut 
and oak. 
Xylotrechus annosus Say. —Breed in the wood of willow. 
Xylotrechus convergens Lec. —Has been bred from a branch 
of a species of thorn ( Cratcegus). 
Xylotrechus colonus Fabr. —Bores under bark of maple, oak 
and hickory. 
Xylotrechus nauticus Mann. — Has been bred from dead 
branches of live-oak in California, also from Eucalyptus . 
Xylotrechus undulatus Say. —Beaten from spruce (Abies') in the 
wood of which the species probably breeds. 
Neoclytus erythrocephalus Fabr. —Breeds in trunkand branches 
of hickory, ash, elm, oak, chestnut and pine, also beaten from locust. 
Neoclytus muricatulus Kby. —Breeds in the trunk and branches 
of pine. 
