158 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Vol. LXXIV 



Length of body 20, length of pronotum 6, length of tegmen 40, 

 greatest width of tegmen 8.5, length of caudal femur 25.5, length 

 of ovipositor 5.8 mm. 



Holochlora fusco-spinosa Brunner. Plate XIV, figures 1 and 2. 



1891. Holochlora fusco-spinosa Brunner, Verh. Zool.-bot. Ges. Wien., XLI, 



p. 92. [cf, Luzon, [Philippine Islands].] 



Los Bafios, Laguna, Luzon, Philippine Islands, August 26, 1915, 

 (L. Uichanco), 1 cf ; 1913, (Ledyard), 1 cf. 

 Mount Makiling, Luzon, Philippine Islands, (from C. F. Baker), 



1 cf. 



Luzon, Philippine Islands, (from C. F. Baker), 1 9. 



Polillo Island, Luzon, Philippine Islands, (from C. F. Baker) ,19. 



This species is closely related to H. javanica Brunner, differing 

 in the tegmina which are obscurely maculate and which, in the 

 females, narrow less evenly distad and are, in consequence, broader 

 meso-distad. A short, suffused postocular line of brown is found 

 on each side of the head, this continued as a short line of the 

 same color along the lateral margins of the pronotal disk at its 

 cephalic margin. 



Brunner does not mention the striclulating area of the tegmina 

 in the male type. In the male before us this area is occupied by a 

 close network of veinlets, the striclulating vein itself subobsolete 

 with no distinct convexity at the costal margin. This appears to 

 agree closely with the type described for the male of H. javanica 

 Brunner. 



The female subgenital plate is minutely emarginate distad, 

 this affording a feature of decided difference from javanica. 



Length of body cf 28, 9 31 and 32; length of pronotum cf 7.2, 



9 8.8 and 8.8; length of tegmen cf 45, 9 56.7 and 57.8; greatest 



width of tegmen cf 11, 9 15.2 and 15.7, meso-caudal width of 



tegmen cf 10.1, 9 13.8 and 14.5; length of cephalic femur cf 6.3, 



9 8 and 8.2; length of caudal femur cf 27.5, 9 34.8, and -: 



length of ovipositor 9.8 and 10.1 mm. 



Holochlora maxima new species. Plate XII, figure 5; plate XIV, figure 3. 



This insect, known from a single female, is closely related tc 

 H. fusco-spinosa Brunner. It differs in the larger size, pale im- 

 maculate femoral spines and more deeply cleft apex of the sub- 

 genital plate. The tegmina are similar but more heavily maculate, 

 this being, however, probably no stronger than in maximum in- 

 tensive individuals of that species. 



