SUBFAMILY I. — MIRING. 677 



land, New York and New Jersey. It is our largest species and 

 when fresh a very handsome one. 



652 ( — ). Trigonotylus longicornis sp. nov. 



Dark green fading - to greenish-yellow; head in part dull yellow; 

 pronotum with three vague fuscous stripes, the median one extending to 

 tip of scutellum and enclosing a narrow pale median line; hind tibia? and 

 basal joints of tarsi red, third tarsal and claws blackish. Joint 1 of 

 antenna? red, almost as long as head and pronotum united; 2 red, yellow- 

 ish toward apex, scarcely twice the length of 1 ; 3 yellowish at base, red 

 toward apex, slightly longer than 2; 4 red, two-fifths as long as 3. 

 Length, 4.5 — 4.7 mm. 



Dunedin, Fla., March 25 — April 4 ; swept from dense clumps 

 of coarse wire-grass along ditches near bay front. Resembles 

 pulchcr, but antennae more reddish, with first joint twice as 

 long. 



653 (895). Trigonotylus confusus Reuter, 1909, 6. 



Pale green; legs, and often the antennae, concolorous, hind tibiae and 

 tarsi reddish; head with median line and pronotum with four percur- 

 rent lines greenish-fuscous ; membrane whitish, the smaller cell coria- 

 ceous, greenish. Joints 1 and 3 of antennae subequal in length, 1 rather 

 stout, attenuate toward apex, as long as pronotum and half of head; 2 

 nearly twice as long as 1, 4 more slender, shorter than 1. Pronotum 

 with base but little wider than that of head, the transverse impression 

 located slightly behind the middle. Length, 4.3 — 5 mm. 



Described from Paincy Point and Bay Ridge, Md. ; not re- 

 corded elsewhere. Similar in size and color to brevipes, but legs 

 and first antennal longer and base of pronotum narrower. 



VIII. Teratocoris Fieber, 1858, 302. 



Elongate or oblong, finely pubescent species having the head 

 short, porrect, wider than long, slightly exserted, vertex trans- 

 versely impressed ; eyes prominent ; antennae as long as or 

 longer than body, joint 1 as in generic key, 2 much more slen- 

 der, as long as clavus, 3 one-half longer than 4, both very 

 slender; beak reaching middle coxae; pronotum narrowed to- 

 ward apex, not declivent in front, its apical constriction dis- 

 tinct, but not cutting the marginal carinae; elytra entire or 

 abbreviated ; membrane with the large cell wholly or in part 

 opaque-punctate, confluent with the cuneus ; basal joint of 

 hind tarsi much longer than second. Three of the four known 

 American species occur in our territory. 



