1915.] Leng, List of the Carabide of. Florida. 571 
Lake Okeechobee (Davis); Gainesville, September, October, Monticello, 
Oct. 4-8. Occurs in Florida, with the preceding, but extends further north 
and west, reaching New York, Indiana, Texas, common in Mobile and Bald- 
win Co., Ala. (Léding). 
Ardistomis puncticollis Putzeys. Cited by Mr. Schwarz as very rare 
but reported since quite often. St. Augustine, Crescent City, Haw Creek 
(Schwarz); Lake Worth, Biscayne Bay (Slosson); Florida (Blatchley); 
Enterprise, November, December (Brownell); Lake Okeechobee, April, 
May (Davis). Confined to Florida except for Blatchley’s Indiana records. 
Ardistomis schaumii Leconte. Common (Schwarz); Miami, Bis- 
cayne Bay, Belleair (Slosson); Dunedin, Arch Creek, Lake Okeechobee, 
January, February, March (Blatchley); Monticello, Oct. 4-8 ieee 
Oct. 14 (Brownell). Confined to Louisiana and Florida. 
Ardistomis morio (Dejean). Fort Myers, March 30, at light (Gross- 
beck). This species, in which the striz of the elytra are punctate in front, 
must be added to the list. Described from Georgia. 
In concluding the enumeration of Floridian Scaritini, it may be interest- 
ing to compare the total of thirty-six species with the twenty-seven cited as 
inhabiting New Jersey, by Smith, as an illustration of the extent to which the 
tribe becomes developed in southern latitudes. The comparison is liable 
to become more striking when the smaller Floridian species are more thor- 
oughly studied, and the increased number in this tribe is contrasted with the 
general paucity of carnivorous beetles in the state. It is a southern tribe, 
gradually diminishing in number of representatives as one traces its distri- 
bution northward until it finally fails completely in Newfoundland and 
Labrador. 
Subfamily HARPALIN/. 
Tribe PANAGZINI. 
Panageus crucigerus (Say). Haulover, Lake Harney (Schwarz); 
Punta Gorda, Lake Worth, Biscayne Bay, Ormond (Slosson Coll., January— 
March); Fort Myers, March 30, at light (Grossbeck). Extends northward 
to New Jersey, westward to Louisiana and Indiana. Nowhere common. 
Mr. Léding finds it rarely in the city of Mobile in July. 
Panageus fasciatus (Say). Fort Capron, Sebastian (Schwarz); Lake 
Worth (Dietz); Fort Myers, April 2, at light (Davis). Extends northward 
to New York, westward to Kansas. Under stones, etc., in dry, sandy 
places; not common. Mobile Co., Ala., February, March, July (Léding). 
