332 THE C.VN.\DIA.N ENTOMOLOGIST, 



Length of body, 15 mm.j antennae, 43 mm.; pronotum, 4 mm.; fore 

 femora, 9 mm.; hind femora, 22 mm.; ovipositor, 4 mm. 



1 ? . Cahon Pass, Cal., July 18. A. P. Morse. 



This species differs distinctly from the species heretofore known in 

 the brevity of the ovipositor, and the overlapping of the female tegmina. 



Arethcea consueti_pes, sp. nov. 



Green, the pronotum sometimes testaceous, the basal half of the 

 male tympanum testaceous, but without other markings. Tegmina just 

 surpassing the hind femora, the radial vein sending five or six branches to 

 the posterior margin ; tympanum of male tegmina produced, lanceolate, 

 as long behind the transverse vein as in front of it, rounded at tip ; legs 

 shorter than common in the genus, the fore and middle femora rectangu- 

 larly produced at tip. 



Length of body, 16 mm.; pronotum, 4.75 mm.; tegmina, 25 mm.; 

 wings, 29.5 mm.; hind femora, 21 mm. 



2 S. Indio, Cal., July 9. A.P.Morse. 



This species differs markedly from the others in the relative brevity 

 of the hind legs. The pronotum lacks the selliform aspect found in the 

 other species, and this species should perhaps be generically distinguished 

 from them. 



Cimopleura flavomarg'mata, sp. nov. 



Testaceous or fusco-testaceous, marked and sculptured quite as in 

 C. melanoplcura, but with the infuscation of the lateral lobes of the 

 pronotum either wanting or much less pronounced, and the lateral caiir?e 

 of the pronotum, if anything, less distant. The legs, and especially the 

 hind legs, are longer (the hind femora longer than the body), and the 

 anal appendages of the male differ in that the cerci have a much shorter 

 incurved apical hook, much shorter than the body of the cerci themselves, 

 and the infragenital plate is apically truncate and not emarginate. 



Length of body, J, 23 mm., %, 25.5 mm.; pronotum, ^ ?, 6.75 

 mm.; hind femora, (^ , 25.5 mm, 9, 26.5 mm.; ovipositor, 19 mm. 



5 c? , 6 $. Ahwanee, Aug. 15; Ceres, Aug. 17; and Raymond, 

 Cal, Aug. 16; A. P. Morse. Calaveras, Cal.; Riley. Other specimens of 

 this species are in the U. S. National Museum. 



Specimens of C. melaiioplciira were taken by Mr. Morse at Teha- 

 chapi, Cal, Aug. 3. 



