158 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [April, '08 



lobes. Cercus slender, somewhat bowed and armed with a 

 single heavy tooth. Legs moderately long, slender and well 

 spined. 



Type. Cyrtophyllicns chlorum, new species. 



Cyrtophyllicns cblorum new species. 



Type. Male; El Portal, Mariposa County, California. Al- 

 titude, 3,200 feet. August 30, 1907. Collected by Morgan 

 Hebard. (Hebard collection.) 



Size moderate; form somewhat slender. Head not broader than 

 cephalic portion of pronotum into which it is well inserted ; fastigium 

 of vertex short, blunt, compressed and deeply sulcate ; eyes small, 

 prominent and semiglobose ; antenna; in length almost six times that 

 of pronotum, filiform, width of basal segment two-thirds that of eye, 

 antennal scrobes somewhat protuberant. Prozona of pronotum not 

 punctate, metazona rugoso-punctate, separated from the prozona by a 

 distinct straight transverse sulcus ; median carina of pronotum scarcely 

 visible ; prozona twice the length of metazona ; cephalic margin per- 

 ceptibly concave, caudal margin broadly rounded. Tegmina slightly 

 more than twice as long as the pronotum, broad and considerably 

 swollen, apically rounded, the costal field much enlarged, costal margin 

 arcuate ; tympanal area distinctly wider than the caudal width of the 

 pronotal disk, its length exceeding width by a third of the Tatter. 

 Wings minute falciform lobes. Abdomen moderately plump, rounded, 

 without dorsal carina, the terminal dorsal abdominal segment covered 

 with very fine hairs. Cerci more than five times as long as the basal 

 width, covered with very fine hairs and on the inner side near the tip 

 armed with a heavy, short and sharp pointed tooth. Subgenital plate 

 with a very shallow subtrigonal apical emargination, styles long and 

 filiform. Legs moderately long and slender, covered with short fine 

 hairs ; posterior femora two and one-half times as long as pronotum 

 and very little swollen on the basal half, armed below on both margins 

 on the apical half only with eleven to twelve small sharp spines ; an- 

 terior and median femora of equal length, longer than the pronotum 

 by a quarter of its length, both armed below on both margins with 

 small spines numbering six to eight on the margins of the anterior 

 femora and seven to eleven on those of the median femora. Posterior 

 tibise slightly compressed, armed below with two apical spurs, margins 

 well spined; anterior and median tibiae armed below with six pairs of 

 heavy spines, anterior tibiae with four spines in the dorso-caudal mar- 

 gin. 



General color uniform bright grass green; eyes pale nut brown; 

 antenna? straw color. 



