600 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History.  [Vol. XXXIV, 
Anisodactylus letus Dejean. Sarasota, March 3, beneath dead craw- 
fish in old pond slush (Blatchley); Clearwater, April 28; Fort Myers, March 
31, April 23, at light. Extends northward to New Jersey, west to Texas. 
Common at light in Mobile Co., Ala. (Léding). 
Anisodactylus agilis Dejean. Haulover, Pensacola, Jacksonville, 
Crescent City (Schwarz); Ormond, Lake Worth, Jacksonville (Slosson Coll., 
January-March); Daytona, Nov. 19 (Engelhardt); Lake City, Oct. (Agl. 
Exp. Sta.); Fort Myers, April 1, at light; Everglade, April 7, Pablo Beach, 
Ortega, September (Davis); Enterprise, September, October (Brownell); 
Sebastian, August (Genung); Key West (Angell Coll.). Occurs also in 
Georgia. . 
Anisodactylus nitidipennis Leconte. Haulover, Enterprise, Cedar 
Keys, not rare (Schwarz); St. Augustine (Johnson); Lake Worth (Hamil- 
ton); Biscayne Bay (Slosson Coll., January-March); Fort Myers, Nov. 12; 
March 30, at light, April 22, at light; Lakeland, Nov. 8, April 22; Lake 
Okeechobee, April 29; Everglade, April 6, grassy meadow with low bushes. 
Extends north to District of Columbia and Indiana. Very common at light 
in Mobile Co., Ala (Léding). 
The three species last named are placed in Anisotarsus Chaudoir by 
Casey and in addition to them he has recently (Memoirs V, Oct., 1914) 
described three other species from Florida, viz.; A. floridanus Casey, 
“ Florida,” allied to terminatus; A. cephalus Casey, “ Florida’; and 
A. tenuitarsis Casey, “ Lake Worth (Kinzel).”’ These, from the descrip- 
tions given, seem close to the specimens listed above as agilis and nitidi- 
pennis. The latter, described from a single specimen from Georgia by 
Leconte, Casey is unable to recognize among his material, though he says 
there can be little doubt that it belongs near cephalus and tenuttarsis. The 
name agilis which has been heretofore used by Schwarz, and others for 
Florida specimens, Casey restricts to specimens from Missouri and Texas, 
and considers it not as closely related to nitidipennis as indicated by Leconte. 
It would therefore not increase the list to include the three species he has 
described, but would substitute the names he has given for those heretofore 
in use, a course I am not at present willing to adopt. 
Anisodactylus terminatus Dejean. Ormond, March, April (Blatch- 
ley). Occurs northward in District of Columbia, New Jersey, Indiana. 
The tribe Harpalini has thus thirty-nine representatives known to occur 
in Florida, to which number two (Tachycellus nebulosus Lee, known from 
Georgia to Texas, and Discoderus parallelus Hald, known from Pennsyl- 
vania to New Mexico), might be added as probable, but even so the total 
would be small as compared with the sixty-eight recorded from New 
Jersey. 
