: 572 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. [Vol. XXXIV, 
Tribe MoRIONINI. 
Morio monilicornis Latreille, Tampa, St. Augustine, Lake Poinsett, 
not rare, under old pine bark (Schwarz); Punta Gorda, Tarpon Springs 
(Slosson Coll. January-March); Silver Springs, Nov. 25 (Engelhardt); 
Ormond, March, frequent between bark of pine logs and snags (Blatchley) ; 
Enterprise, September, November (Brownell). Extends northward to 
North Carolina, westward to Lower California; occurs also in the West 
Indies. Common under pine bark in Alabama (Léding). 
Tribe BEMBIDIINI. 
Many of the records quoted below were made before the late Roland 
Hayward’s studies in the tribe were published and to some extent disagree 
with the distribution given by him for the species. Such are preceded by 
an interrogation to indicate the doubt that must exist until the data are 
reconciled. | 
Bembidium contractum Say. Common, near the sea coast, from 
Massachusetts to Florida (Schwarz, Hayward); Punta Gorda, Lake Worth 
(Slosson Coll. January-March); Dunedin, Sarasota, Arch Creek, January, 
March, on beach of gulf and bays (Blatchley); Key West ? (Leng Coll.); 
Everglade, Fort Myers, April, May, June, July (Davis); Clearwater, April 
28 (Van Duzee); at light and in salt marshes. 
Bembidium constrictum Leconte. Occurs with the preceding and 
not easily separated from it. Lake Worth, Biscayne Bay (Slosson); Key 
West Nov. 21 (Engelhardt). Extends north to Canada and west to New 
Mexico (Hayward). | : 
?Bembidium affine Say. Cited but not seen by Schwarz; occurs 
along Atlantic coast, New England to Florida, and west to Arizona (Hay- 
ward). No definite Floridian recent records are known, but the name is 
included in the Cuban list. 
Bembidium versicolor Leconte. Not rare (Schwarz); St. Augustine 
(Johnson); “ Fla.’”’ (Slosson Coll. January-March); Enterprise, Nov. 12, 
under lake shore debris (Brownell); Fort Myers, Nov. 15, at light; Punta 
Gorda, Nov. 16 (Davis). The specimens I have seen are darker and smaller 
than the usual northern form; Hayward gives “ United States and Canada 
reaching to Newfoundland, Anticosti Island and Manitoba” and Texas and 
southern California, but does not mention Florida, apparently including 
Floridian specimens with affine. Blatchley cites flavopictum Mots. which 
