REHN: SANTA RITA ORTHOPTERA. 305 



blotched one over the other, the tegmina, dorsal face of the 

 caudal femora and disk of the pronotum with the green pre- 

 dominating; ventral surface Isabella color. Dorsum of the 

 head and pronotum with a regular figure of green which is 

 margined laterad with clove brown, this figure being con- 

 stricted at the caudal margin of the head and almost severed 

 mesad on the pronotum; antennae clove brown annulate with 

 pea green, their insertion bordered dorsad and ventrad by a 

 pair of transverse lines of clove brown ; eye walnut brown. 

 Wings with the disk orange rufous, the distal and caudal 

 margins with a moderately broad band of vandyke brown which 

 fails to reach the proximal margin, ulnar tsenia extending 

 about half way to the base of the wing ; apex with the smaller 

 areas and a few of the short veins creamy white. Caudal 

 femora with the dorsal face crossed by a median and a disto- 

 median bar of clove brown, while the apex is touched with the 

 same color, ventral sulcus washed with pale blue; caudal tibise 

 turquoise blue with the lateral face of the proximal third green- 

 ish white and the extreme distal portion of the internal face 

 blackish, leaving a pregenicular pale annulus, the apex dark 

 blue, and a dark blue annulus placed next to the pale one; 

 tarsal joints very pale ochraceous. 



Measurements. 



Length of body 23 . 8 mm. 



Length of pronotum 4.5 



Length of caudal femur 12 . 



Length of tegmen 21.0 



The type specimen is the only one seen by the author. 



Tonionotus aztectis (Saussure). 



Santa Rita mountains, 5000 to 8000 feet, July, 1907. F. H. 

 Snow. One male. 



Mestohregma rubripeiine (Bruner). 



Santa Rita mountains, 5000 to 8000 feet, July, 1907. F. H. 

 Snow. One male, one female. 



Conozoa carinata Rehn. 



Santa Rita mountains, 5000 to 8000 feet, July, 1907. F. H. 

 Snow. One female. 



Trimerotropis allicieyis (Scudder). 



Santa Rita mountains, 5000 to 8000 feet, June and July, 

 1907. F. H. Snow. Three males. 



These specimens are somewhat smaller than a female from 

 the Huachuca mountains. 



2-Univ Sci. Bull., Vol. V, Nq. 17. 



