2 STATEN ISLAND INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES 
1b, Ibe, Ce lal INooets, Joan ID, Saeenmem, ir, ancl jioseon C. 
Thompson. More recently specimens have been collected by John 
W. Angell, Dr. James P. Chapin, Edwin A. Bischoff, Charles 
Benedict, Edward J. Burns, Howard Notman, John A. Grossbeck, 
Charles W. Leng, Jr., Alan S. Nicolay, Alanson Skinner, Ernest 
Shoemaker, Lewis B. Woodruff, Frederick Winters and others. 
The names of some of these collectors appear throughout the list 
after the records contributed by them. Mr. Charles Schaeffer has 
contributed a number of records, and we are also indebted to him 
for assistance in determining a number of species and for the 
synonymy in the genus Donacia. In Aleocharine the determina- 
tions are those of Dr. A. Fenyes. 
As a result of this combination of effort, 1600 species are re- 
corded in the present list. A number of varieties are also noted. 
Owing to its geographical position Staten Island was included 
as a locality in the 1910 list of New Jersey Insects, and several 
species are mentioned there that do not appear in the present list 
as they were probably misidentified. 
The number preceding each name refers to Leng’s “ Catalogue 
of the Coleoptera of America, north of Mexico,” published in 
1920. 
RVAIMOUL SY (CICILNIDIEIL IUD Ab, 
39b. Cicindela formosa var. generosa De}. Watchogue, Lome 
Neck, Lake’s Island and Tottenville, from April to 
October. | 
42. Cicindela purpurea Oliv. April, June, Aug. and Sept.; 
principally in the Clove Valley, but not common in 
recent years. Near Silver Lake, March, 1881, on hill 
among cedars which have now disappeared. 
49, Cicindela duodecimguttata Dej. Watchogue and Clove 
Valley; May, June, Sept. and Oct., especially in. moist 
places. 
50. Cicindela repanda Dej. April to Oct., and often quite 
numerous on moist areas. 
