152 HEMIPTERA-HETEROPTERA. 
Hypselonotus striatulus, Burm. Handb. ii. 1, p. 320. 1°; Blanch. Hist. des Ins. p. 126.1, t. 4. f. 6°; 
Hope, Cat. Hem. ii. p. 21; A. & S. Hist. des Hém. p. 241. 1’. 
Hypselonotus fulvus, Dall. List Hem. ii. p. 464. 1°; Mayr, Reise d. Nov. Hem. p. 100°; Stal, En. 
Hem. i. p. 201. 4"°; Berg, Hem. Argent. p. 86. 108”. 
Hypselonotus venosus, Stal, Hem. Fabr. i. p. 56.1”. 
Hab. Panama (coll. Dist.).—Cotomta 8, Bogota 1°; Gutana®, Cayenne !7 8, Demerara § 
(coll. Dist.); Ecuapor, Guayaquil!®; Brazin2%456810, Pernambuco (forbes), Rio 
Janeiro®; ARGENTINE REPUBLIC 1}, 
5. Hypselonotus interruptus. (Tab. XVI. fig. 1.) 
Hypselonotus interruptus, Hahn, Wanz. Ins. i. p. 187. f. 96*; Burm. Handb. u. 1, p. 820. 2’; 
A. &8. Hist. des Hém. p. 242, not.’; Dall. List Hem. ii. p. 465. 2*; Mayr, Reise d. Nov. Hem. 
p- 100°; Stal, En. Hem. i. p. 202. 5°; Berg, Hem. Argent. p. 87. 109’. 
Hypselonotus bilineatus, Hope, Cat. Hem. ii. p. 21°. 
Hypselonotus lineaticollis, Stal, Ofv. Vet.-Ak. Férh. 1855, p. 185. 1. 
Hab. Mexico 4.—Braziu1?23468, Minas Geraés®, Rio Janeiro®®; ARGENTINE RE- 
PUBLIC’. 
This species is here inserted on the authority of Mr. Dallas, who has given the habitat 
Mexico to an undoubted specimen of the species. It is a most variable species; and the 
specimen figured represents the H. bilineatus, Hope, which is also the Mexican form in 
the British Museum. 
6. Hypselonotus concinnus. (Tab. XIV. figg. 25, 26.) 
Hypselonotus concinnus, Dall. List Hem. ii. p. 465. 3°; Stal, Stett. ent. Zeit. xxiii. p. 297. 159°; 
En. Hem. i. p. 202. 6°. 
Hypselonotus propinquus, Walk. Cat. Hem. iv. p. 142. 18*. 
Hab. Mexico !? (coll. Sallé), Oaxaca*; Brrrish Honpuras}, river Sarstoon (Blan- 
caneaux); GUATEMALA, city of Guatemala, San Gerénimo, Purula, Cubilguitz (Cham- 
pton).—CoLoMBIA, Bogota °. 
This is a most variable species; but in all the specimens which I have examined the 
scutellum is testaceous, and the central levigate line to the pronotum always present. 
In some very dark specimens the femora are fuscous; but they are usually testaceous. 
7. Hypselonotus atratus, n. sp. (Tab. XIV. fig. 27.) 
Black; head red, with a basal black band above; pronotal collar, a large sublunate fascia to pronotum, com- 
mencing at lateral angles and continued along lateral margins, and meeting on disk a little before anterior 
margin, costal margin of corium, excluding apex, and two broad fasciz on disk of corium, placed trans- 
versely, truncate above and rounded beneath, but not quite meeting, luteous. Body beneath testaceous ; 
base of prosternum, base of and central fascia to meso- and metasternum, basal fascie to disks of abdominal 
segments, and legs, excluding coxe, black; prosternal collar, bases of pro-,meso-, and metasternum, and 
discal apical halves of abdominal segments pale luteous. Rostrum black. Abdomen above testaceous, 
+ apical third more or less black. Joints of antennz subequal in length, or third somewhat shortest. 
Long. 12 millim. 
