126 HEMIPTERA-HETEROPTERA. 
7. Leptoglossus lineosus. (Tab. XII. fig. 17.) 
Theognis lineosus, Stal, Stett. ent. Zeit. xxiii. p. 295. 153’. 
Leptoglossus lineosus, Stal, En. Hem. i. p. 164. 16°. 
| Hab. Mexico 12. 
8. Leptoglossus subauratus, n. sp. (Tab. XII. fig. 18.) 
Above dark castaneous, sparingly pilose; head with three longitudinal lines, one central and two lateral. 
Antenne, margins and a broad central fascia (crescentic anteriorly) to pronotum, a central longitudinal 
line to scutellum, nervures, claval, costal, and apical margins and a median transverse fascia to corium, 
and a row of subquadrate spots on connexivum at ventral incisuresluteous. Body beneath dark castaneous ; 
head with a longitudinal line on each side near eyes, sternum with three oblique narrow fascie (first near 
coste, ill-defined and obscure, second extending to posterior margin of metasternum, and third and outer 
semicircular) on each side of ventral incisures, two ill-defined longitudinal fasciee on each side and 
a central longitudinal broken fascia on disk of abdomen, anterior and intermediate legs luteous. 
Antenne strongly pilose, first and third joints subequal, fourth smooth, thickened, and slightly longer than 
third, second longest, half as long again as first. Pronotum regularly and finely punctate ; posterior femora 
ochraceous, with the apex fuscous, and an inner apical row of strong spines; posterior tibie luteous, 
dilated on each side before the middle, dilated portion black, with a small luteous spot on inner margin, 
which is also provided with two or three small teeth. 
Long. 14-18 millim. 
Hab. Guatemaa, Capetillo (Champion); Nicaracua, Chontales (coll. Dist.). 
Allied to ZL. lineosus, Stal, from which it differs in the more angulated dilatation of 
the posterior tibiee, and the different colour of the antenne, pronotum, &c. 
9. Leptoglossus gonagra. 
Cimex gonagra, Fabr. Syst. Ent. p. 708. 57; Goeze, Ent. Beytr. ii. p. 241. 23; Fabr. Spec. Ins. ii. 
p. 852. 82; Mant. Ins. ii. p. 289. 101; Gmel. Syst. Nat. i. 4, p. 2148. 236. 
Cimex grallator, Herbst, Gem. Naturg. vi. p. 239. 12, t. 39 B. f. 2. 
Lygeus gonagra, Fabr. Ent. Syst. iv. p. 140. 19; Syst. Rhynch. p. 210. 27. 
Anisoscelis antica, H.-S. Wanz. Ins. iii. p. 92. f. 8167; Dall. List Hem. ii. p. 453. 7. 
Anisoscelis gonagra, Burm. Handb. ii. 1, p. 882.4°; Hope, Cat. Hem. ii. p. 16; Dall. List Hem. 
ii. p. 453. 6°; Guér. in Sagra’s Hist. de Cuba, Ins. p. 387%. 
Theognis gonager, Mayr, Reise d. Nov., Hem. p. 103. 
Leptoglossus gonagra, Stal, Hem. Fabr. i. p. 51.1; En. Hem. i. p. 165. 17°; Berg, Hem. Argent. 
p. 72. 89°. 
Stoll, Pun. f. 73. 
Hab. Muxico?°; British Honpuras?, river Sarstoon (Blancaneaur); GUATEMALA, 
San Gerénimo, San Isidro (Champion).—Cusa *; Brazin 135, Minas Geraés 5, Bahia 2, 
Rio Janeiro 2; ARGENTINE REPUBLIC °, 
NARNIA. 
Narnia, Stal, Stett. ent. Zeit. xxiii. p. 294 (1862) ; Ofv. Vet-Ak. Férh. 1867, p. 544; En. Hem. i. 
p. 166 (1870). 
This genus is very closely allied to the preceding. The characters on which Stal 
seems to have principally relied are—the shorter basal joint of the antenne (which is 
