198 



PKOCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Vol. LXXIV 



& 

 Los Bafios 

 Mount Makiling 

 Iligan 

 Singapore 

 9 

 Baguio 



Mount Makiling 

 Mount Makiling 

 Mount Makiling 

 Palillo Island 

 Davao 



Length 



of 

 body 

 21.3 

 24.7 

 26.7 

 27 



25 



31.5 



37.7 



30.5 s7 



35.5 



36 



Length 

 of 

 pronotum 

 5 

 6 



6.7 

 6.7 



5.8 



7 



9.1 



8.7 



9.3 



8.1 



Length 



of 

 tegmen 



28.7 



40.3 



36 



43 



33.1 



39.8 

 51.2 

 59 

 51.7 



47.2 



Width 



of 



tegmen 



7.7 



9.8 



10.8 



11.2 



9.4 

 10.8 

 14.8 

 15 

 15.6 

 13.S 



Length Length 

 of caudal of ovi- 

 feinur positor 

 10.7 

 14.2 

 14.6 

 14.8 



11.8 



14 



18.7 



20.7 



20.5 



16.8 



12.8 



15 



19.S 



29.2 



20.5 



19.3 



Phyllomimus ampullae eus (Haan) 



1842. L[ocusta] {Aprion) ampullacea Haan, Verh. Natuur. Geschied. 



Nederl. overzee. bezitt. Zool., p. 205. [cf , 9 : Java; Padang, [Sumatra].] 

 1895. Phyllomimus palhdus Brunner, Monogr. der Pseudophylhden, p. 57. 



[cf , 9 : Borneo; Cambodia; Palawan,] Philippine Islands].] 



Labuan, British North Borneo, 1 9 . 



This species differs widely from P. deter sus (Walker). 58 The 

 tegminal markings are distinctive, though very faint. In the 

 present species the wings fail to reach the extremities of the tegmina 

 by a very brief distance, but show, nevertheless, decided atrophy, 

 quite unfitting them for even usefulness as parachutes. 



The present specimen is much smaller than the female described 

 by Brunner as pallidas. The species, like detersus, is probably 

 subject to decided size variation. Length of body 27, length of 

 pronotum 6.1, length of tegmen 40, median width of tegmen 13.2, 

 length of wing 35.8, greatest width of wing 13.8, length of cephalic 

 femur 6.1, length of caudal femur 13.1, length of ovipositor 13.2, 

 median width of ovipositor 3 mm. 



Phyllomimus tonkinae new species. Plate XVII, figure 4. 



This insect appears nearest P. inquinatus Brunner, described 

 from a unique female, from Penang, British Straits Settlements. 



The present male differs from the description and a male of that 

 species before us, in being dark green in coloration, the tegmina 

 with nearly colorless areas between the veins distad, with minute 

 callosities mesad in all the larger areolae, which are whitish, except 

 those between the ulnar and median vein which are dark. It is a 

 much heavier and decidedly less delicate insect, the male body bulk 

 being much greater and the organs of flight less developed, the 

 egmina narrowing more decidedly distad to the much narrower 



67 The body is shrivelled in this specimen. 



68 The above synonymy has recently been indicated by Karny {Zool. Mededeel. 

 Rijks Mus. Nat. Hist. Leiden, V, p. 175, {1920)). 



