460 APPENDIX. 
areas punctate, the disk impunctate ; lateral angles of the pronotum subnodulose ; antenne finely setose, 
the first, second, and fourth joints subequal in length, the third joint shortest ; tibia finely setose. 
Long. 12 millim. 
Hab. Panama, Boquete in Chiriqui 3500 feet (Champion). 
A single example. 
CURUPIRA. (To follow the genus Leptocorisa, p. 162.) 
Curupira, Distant, Compt. Rend. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1888, p. xi. 
I proposed this genus for the reception of a species from Rio Janeiro. I am now 
able to add another species from the State of Panama. 
1. Curupira villosa, n. sp. (Tab. XXXIX. fig. 24.) 
Head, pronotum, and scutellum black, very thickly greyish pilose; eyes pale castaneous; antenne, apical 
spine to scutellum, hemelytra, connexivum, and legs ochraceous; head beneath and sternum Dlack ; 
abdomen beneath ochraceous, its base, apex, and sometimes the whole of lateral margins black; abdomen 
above with the apical area black; apices of the tarsi fuscous. The head, pronotum, and sternum are 
coarsely punctate; the apical spine to the scutellum is long, slender, and slightly directed backwardly ; 
the second and third joints of the antenne are subequal in length and each shorter than the fourth. 
Long. 8-9 millim. 
Hab. Panama, Caldera in Chiriqui (Champion). 
Mr. Champion procured us a series of examples of this species. 
STENOCEPHALUS. (To follow the genus Curupira). 
Stenocephalus, Latreille, Fam. Nat. p. 421 (1825); Dall. List Hem. ii. p. 481 (1852). 
A very widely distributed genus, most numerously represented in the Old World. 
1. Stenocephalus mexicanus. 
Stenocephalus mexicanus, Ashm. Canad. Ent. xviii. p. 19 (1886) ’. 
- Hab. Mexico, Tehuantepec (Sumichrast'). 
NEIDES. (To precede the genus Jalysus, p. 162.) 
Neides (part.), Latreille, Hist. Gen. Ins. 8, p. 120 (1807) ; Amy. & Serv. Hist. des Hem. p. 233 
(1843). | 
Neides, Fieber, Eur. Hem. pp. 54 & 209 (1861) ; Stal, En. Hem. iv. p. 127 (1874). 
This genus, widely distributed throughout the Palearctic and Nearctic regions, and 
also recorded from New Zealand, is now included in the Neotropical fauna on account 
of the presence of the following species. 
1. Neides caducus, n. sp. 
Pale ochraceous ; margins and a central line to pronotum, a central fascia to scutellum, and margins of clavus 
stramineous ; apical joint of the antenne (excluding base and apex) and the tarsi fuscous ; head beneath 
with a pale stramineous longitudinal fascia on each side. The pronotum is very coarsely and thickly 
