. Annual report, including a report of the insects of New Jersey, 1909. 274 REPORr OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. CYCHRAMUS Kug. C. adustus Er. Hoboken (Sm); Orange Mts. in fungus (Bf) (W); Atco IX, 4 (Brn); in puff-balls, never common. Westville CYBOCEPHALUS Er. C. nigritulus Lee. Snake Hill (Sf). CRYPTARCHA Schuck. C. ampla Er. Throughout the State; a general sap feeder V-VII. C. strigata Fabr. Ft. Lee (Sf); Hudson Co. (LI); Orange (Ch); g. d., on sap at all times (W); usually not common. C. concinna Mels. Ft. Lee (Sf); Hudson Co. (LI); g. d., not rare (Bf); Lahaway II, 8 (Sm). IPS Fabr. I. obt


. Annual report, including a report of the insects of New Jersey, 1909. 274 REPORr OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. CYCHRAMUS Kug. C. adustus Er. Hoboken (Sm); Orange Mts. in fungus (Bf) (W); Atco IX, 4 (Brn); in puff-balls, never common. Westville CYBOCEPHALUS Er. C. nigritulus Lee. Snake Hill (Sf). CRYPTARCHA Schuck. C. ampla Er. Throughout the State; a general sap feeder V-VII. C. strigata Fabr. Ft. Lee (Sf); Hudson Co. (LI); Orange (Ch); g. d., on sap at all times (W); usually not common. C. concinna Mels. Ft. Lee (Sf); Hudson Co. (LI); g. d., not rare (Bf); Lahaway II, 8 (Sm). IPS Fabr. I. obtusus Say. Throughout the State; rare; on sap. I. quadriguttatus Fabr. (fasciatus) Throughout the State; common under bark, on sap and sometimes in fruits. I. sanguinolentus Oliv. Throughout the State, though somewhat local and rarely common. RHIZOPHAGUS Hbst. Fig. io6.—Ips A. scalpturatus Mann. Orange Mts., salt meadows (Bf). quadriguttatus R. cylindricus Lee. Lahaway III, VI, VII (div); Gren- ^"^ ^^?^^^' loch XI, 26 (W); g. d., not rare (Li). R. cylindricus Lee. Lahaway III, VI, VII (div); Grenloch XI, 26 (W); g. d., not rare (Li). R. brunneus Horn. Grenloch XI, 26, lona IV, 30, live deep underground around roots of pine (W). R. bipunctatus Say. Hudson Co. (LI); Woodside, once plentiful (Bf). R. minutus Mann. Orange Mts., rare (Bf). Family LATRIDIID^. Very small, oval, convex insects with the thorax usually narrower than the elytra. They are very commonly brown in color, often striated, occa- sionally banded, and found commonly under bark, under decayed leaves and in sweeping among vegetation in early evening. The larvae are oval, soft, very hairy, and live in vegetable refuse, fungi, etc. Occasionally they are found in granaries, But never in really troublesome numbers. The arrangement here follows the revision of Prof. H. C. Fall in the. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readabilit


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