150 The Philippine Journal of Science 1922 
Gonypeta borneana Giglio-Tos. 
Boll. Soc. Ent. Ital. 46 (1914) Florence (1915) 155. 
Compared with specimens of G. punctata as defined by Giglio- 
Tos, from Java and Sumatra, the Philippine specimens distinctly 
show the specific differences. The granules on pronotum and 
outer portion of anterior femora are very strong and the color- 
ation is distinctly darker, in one specimen nearly black; only 
the dimensions are somewhat smaller than indicated by Giglio- 
Tos. 
MINDANAO, Zamboanga, 2 males. 
COMPSOMANTIN 4 
Compsomantis tumidiceps (Bolivar). 
Bolivar, An. Soc. Esp. Hist. Nat. 19 (1890) 303 (Compsomantis) ; 
Kirby, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 13 (1904) 83 (Humbertiella ? 
brunneri) ; Werner, Verh. Zool. bot. Ges. Wien. (1916) 258 (Hapa- 
lomantis) ; Giglio-Tos, Boll. Soc. Ent. Ital. 46 (1914) 86; Hebard, 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 72 (1920) 36. 
This species was first described from the Philippines, but 
occurs also on Lombok and Sumbawa Islands (Kirby, Werner). 
The present specimen differs slightly from a female from Lom- 
bok, in my collection, by a somewhat longer pronotum, probably 
owing to its sex. There is no doubt that Giglio-Tos is perfectly 
right in uniting this species with Compsomantis crassiceps De 
Haan and Hapalomantis rufula Westwood in the same group; 
the union seems very natural. 
LuzON, Mount Maquiling, 1 specimen (probably a mee end 
of abdomen missing). 
THESPIN 2 
Euchomenella heteroptera (De Haan). 
Bijdr. Kenn. Orth. p. 78, pl. 18, fig. 1; Saussure, Mem. Soc. Gen. 
21 (1871) 48; Giglio-Tos, Boll. Soc. Ent. Ital. 47 (1915) 34, 365. 
This species seems not to have been found previously in the 
Philippine Islands, where only the rather closely related 
Tagalomantis manillensis Sauss. is known. It is easily dis- 
tinguished from that species by its unicolorous, infumated wings. 
The specimen agrees perfectly with De Haan’s figure, whereas 
the species figured as the female belongs, as Giglio-Tos has 
already pointed out, to quite another genus, called Mythomantis 
by that author. I have a specimen of the latter insect, M. 
confusa Westwood, from Java, that agrees in every respect 
with De Haan’s figure. 
LUZON, Tayabas Province, Malinao, 1 mai. 
