200 HEMIPTERA-HETEROPTERA. 
3. Leogorrus venator. (Tab. XII. fig. 9, 2.) 
Leoyorrus venator, Stal, Stett. ent. Zeit. 1862, p. 456'; Enum. Hemipt. 1. p. 119%. 
Hab. Mexico 12 (Sallé; Heller, in Mus. Vind. Ces.), Milpas in Durango (Porrer), 
Atoyac in Vera Cruz (H. H. Smith), Jalapa (Hoge), Temax in N. Yucatan (Gaumer), 
Chiapas (Jf. Trujillo) ; Guatemata, Teleman in Vera Paz (Champion). 
This species, one of the types of which is before me, is very like L. ditura, but differs 
from it in having the eyes smaller and less prominent; the lateral post-ocular portions 
of the head a little longer than the eyes; the membrane fuscous, with a triangular 
ochreous patch on the outer margin adjoining the similarly coloured apex of the 
corium, the nervures entirely dark ; the pronotum and legs clothed with longer hairs. 
The venter, as in J. ditura, is sharply carinate almost to the apex. The seven specimens 
from Yucatan have the body rufo-castaneous, and the legs and antenne rufo-testaceous, 
probably due to immaturity; they are extremely like the Brazilian L. pallipes, Stal 
(a type of which is before me), which, however, has a smaller and less elongate head, 
and a more sparsely pilose pronotum. A specimen from Teleman is figured. 
4, Leogorrus longiceps, n. sp. (Tab. XII. fig. 10, 2.) 
Moderately elongate, nigro-piceous or black, the covered dorsal portion of the abdomen obscure ferruginous, the 
elytra with a small patch below the base—extending over the apical half of the clavus, the extreme base 
of the membrane, and the adjoining inner portion of the corium,—a small, subtriangular, posteriorly 
excised patch on the outer portion of the membrane, and the apex of the corium broadly, ochreous, the 
latter fulvous in some specimens; the second joint of the antenne and the tarsi sometimes fulvous; the 
body, legs, and antenne clothed with very long, fine, fulvous hairs, the tibiee densely clothed with fulvous 
hairs on the inner side towards the apex. Head comparatively elongate, very much longer than the 
anterior lobe of the pronotum, the lateral post-ocular portions considerably longer than the eyes, the eyes 
not prominent and rather small. Pronotum with the two lobes subequal in length, almost smooth, deeply 
sulcate down the middle, the transverse median sulcus interrupted on each side of the central groove, the 
anterior lobe shallowly obliquely sulcate on each side of the disc, the anterior angles rather prominent. 
Scutellar process short, curved upwards at the tip. Abdomen not extending beyond the apex of the elytra 
in the male. Venter sharply carinate at the base, the carina gradually becoming evanescent towards 
the apex. 
Length 123-134, breadth 43-5 millim. (¢ 9.) 
Hab. Mexico, Orizaba (Bilimek, in Mus. Vind. Ces.); Guatemata, El Reposo, 
Volcan de Atitlan (Champion). 
Six specimens, four of which are from Guatemala. Very like L. venator, Stal, with 
which it was confused in the Vienna Museum collection; but differing from that 
species in having a smaller ochreous patch on the basal portion of the elytra and in 
the more elongate head, the post-ocular portions of the latter being much longer than 
the eyes. It is also a little larger and more elongate. In fresh specimens the 
connexival segments have each a patch of pallid appressed pubescence. L. (Reduvius) 
zanthospilus, Walk., from Ega, is an allied form; it has the ochreous post-basal patch 
reduced to a spot on the corium, the apex of the latter black, &c. A specimen from 
El Reposo is figured. 
