838 ZOOLOGY INSECTS. 



HADRONEMA, Uhler. 

 HADRONEMA MILITAKIS, Uhler. 



PLATE XLII, FIG. 12. 

 Hadronema milifaris, UnLER, U. S. Geol. Surv. Montana, Io70, 412. 



From Roaring Fork, Colorado, by Dr. J. T. Rothrock. It seems to be 

 very widely distributed throughout the Territories west of the Mississippi 

 basin, and extends across to the Pacific coast. 



CALOCORIS, Fieber. 

 CALOCORIS PALMERII, Uhler. 



PLATE XLII, FIG. 4. 



1. Calocoris pnlmerii, UHLER, U. S. Geol. Surv. Montana, 1870, 410, No. 2. 



A few varieties were collected near the Gila River in Arizona by Dr. 



Oscar Loew. 



CALOCORIS SUPERBUS, sp. nov. 



PLATE XLII, FIG. 3. 



2. Calocoris superbus, UHLER, sp. nov. 



Having the same form and general characters as C. rapidus, Say. It 

 differs, however, in being bright scarlet ; the rostrum extending only to the 

 posterior line of the middle coxae ; the antennae black, and having only the 

 base of the third joint pale ; the scutellum blood-red, with the lateral mar- 

 gin black ; the clavus and inner margin broadly black ; the areole of the 

 membrane deeply infuscated ; the pectus orange-red ; and the middle line of 

 the venter blackish. Legs black, but with pale yellowish coxae. Tergum 

 a little infuscated. 



Length. 7i millimeters ; breadth across the humeri, 2f millimeters. 

 One female from Owen's Valley, California (F. Bischoff). 



LOPIDEA, Uhler. 

 LOPIDEA MEDIA, Say. 

 Lopidea media, SAY, Heteropt. New Harmony, 22, No. 11. 



One female of the usual variety was collected in Owen's Valley, Cali- 

 fornia, by F. Bischoff. 



