HEMIPTERA-HETEROPTERA. 323 
1. Beroaldus erubescens, n. sp. (Tab. XXIX. fig. 21.) 
Ochraceous, darkly punctate, and more or less mottled with brownish. Head with the margins of the central 
lobe, the outer margins of the lateral lobes, and some punctures in front of the eyes brownish; eyes 
fuscous ; ocelli reddish ; antennz with the first and second joints brownish, the base and apex of the 
second somewhat darker, third and fourth joints ochraceous, the base and apex of the third, and a large 
subapical annulation to the fourth, fuscous ; pronotum very coarsely but sparsely punctate, the punctures 
dark brownish ; scutellum with a somewhat testaceous tinge, punctures piceous at base and towards apex ; 
corium with two large patches of black punctures ; membrane fuscous, with the apex paler ; connexivum 
spotted with fuscous. Body beneath and legs ochraceous ; lateral margins and areas of the former pale 
brownish and somewhat punctate ; legs, especially the tibie, spotted with brownish. Antenne with the 
second joint a little shorter than third and fourth joints together, the third joint a little longer than 
the fourth. 
Long. 11 millim. 
Hab. GuateMaLa, Senahu in Vera Paz (Champion); Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 
2500 to 4000 feet (Champion). : 
ARCHITAS, gen. nov. (To precede the genus Dinocoris, p. 49.) 
Head at base about twice as broad as long ; lateral lobes meeting in front of the central lobe ; ocelli wider apart 
from each other than from the eyes ; antennee five-jointed, inserted beneath the head at about two thirds the 
distance from the apex to the eyes. Rostrum inserted near the base of the head, the basal joint reaching 
the anterior coxe. Body broad, subovate; pronotum at the lateral angles twice as broad as the head, 
depressed from near the base to the head, the lateral angles obtusely and obscurely angulated. Scutellum 
extending to about three fourths the length of the abdomen. Apical margins of the corium straight. 
Mesosternum with a very slight and obscure central longitudinal keel; metasternum with a central, 
angulated and slightly elevated plate between the posterior legs; abdomen with an obtuse basal spine 
and a central longitudinal sulcation. 
Allied to Cataulax, Spin., but differing from that genus as diagnosed by Stal (Ofv. 
Vet.-Ak. Forh. 1867, pp. 499, 500) in not having the head “ eque longo ac lato vel 
longiore quam inter oculos latiore.” 
1. Architas pudens, n. sp. (Tab. XXIX. fig. 20.) 
Ochraceous, coarsely and darkly punctate; head with the margins of the central lobe and a submarginal fascia 
to the lateral lobes formed of almost confluent brown punctures; eyes fuscous ; ocelli reddish-ochraceous ; 
antennz dull ochraceous, first, second, and third joints spotted with fuscous; pronotum and scutellum 
somewhat sparingly covered with dark brown punctures; corium similarly darkly punctate, but with 
some discal patches of still darker punctures ; membrane fuscous; connexivum with small dark marginal 
spots. Body beneath and legs pale reddish-ochraceous, with coarse reddish punctures, the lateral 
margins more or less testaceous, the legs spotted with fuscous. Antenne with the second joint slightly 
longer than the third, fourth and fifth joints longest and subequal in length. 
Long. 12 millim. 
Hab. Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui 2000 to 3000 feet (Champion). 
DINOCORIS (p. 45). 
1 (a). Dinocoris macraspis. (Tab. XXIX. fig. 19.) 
Pentatoma macraspis, Perty, Del. Anim. p. 166, t. 33. f. 77. 
Dinocoris macraspis, Burm. Handb. ii. 1, p. 364. 2°; H.-S. Wanz. Ins. ii. f. 279. 
Dinocoris annulatus, H.-S. Wanz. Ins. iii. p. 66°. 
41% 
