. Bulletin. Natural history; Natural history. 226 ILLINOIS NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY BULLETIN XX:III C. maculatus (Harris). 1841 Rhaphidorphora maculata Harris, Rept. Insects Mass., p. 126. Massachusetts. 1920 CeuthophUiis maculatus Blatchley, Orth. Northeast. Am., pp. 622-624, fig. 207; pi. VI, fig. b; pi. VII, figs, d, j. Statement of range in part incorrect; latebricola Scudder correctly and bicolor Scudder incorrectly synonymized. 1920 CeuthophUiis maculatus Morse, Orth. New Eng., pp. 379-380, fig. 60; pi. 14, figs. 24, 25. 1922 Ceuthophilus maculatus E. M. Walker, Ann. Ent. Soc. Am., vol. 15


. Bulletin. Natural history; Natural history. 226 ILLINOIS NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY BULLETIN XX:III C. maculatus (Harris). 1841 Rhaphidorphora maculata Harris, Rept. Insects Mass., p. 126. Massachusetts. 1920 CeuthophUiis maculatus Blatchley, Orth. Northeast. Am., pp. 622-624, fig. 207; pi. VI, fig. b; pi. VII, figs, d, j. Statement of range in part incorrect; latebricola Scudder correctly and bicolor Scudder incorrectly synonymized. 1920 CeuthophUiis maculatus Morse, Orth. New Eng., pp. 379-380, fig. 60; pi. 14, figs. 24, 25. 1922 Ceuthophilus maculatus E. M. Walker, Ann. Ent. Soc. Am., vol. 15, p. 26; pi. Ill, fig. 27. cT genitalia described and figured. 1925 Ceuthophilus maculatus Hebard, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phil., vol. 77, pp. 140-141. Range correctly stated, except Kentucky, Missouri and Kansas (based on doubtful or erroneous records in literature); seclusus Scudder incorrectly Fig. 160.—Adult female of the camel cricket Ceuthophilus maculatus (Harris). X 2. The range of this species is extensive, with limits which may be given as follows: Nova Scotia and New Brunswick westward north of Lake Superior to Lake Winnipeg, Man., thence south through Devil's Lake, N. D., Springfield, S. D. and West Point, Neb.; the species is not known from Kansas nor certainly from Missouri, but extends south along the Mississippi to West Helena, Ark.; east of the Mississippi its southern limits are reached in southern Illinois, Indiana and central Ohio, while farther east it is apparently common throughout New Eng- land and New York, but is represented in the collections examined from only four localities south of Long Island—Rockville and Chestnut Hill, Pa., "Maryland" and the District of Columbia. These records are based partly upon a specimen from the Kabina-Kagami river, Algoma District, Ont., in the Canadian National Collection; unrecorded series from Arkansas in the Museum of Zoology, University of Michi- gan; a female labeled "Maryland,"


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