BY WALTER W. FROGGATT. 291 



trailing out all round giving them a star-like appearance, and 

 each family makes a large white blotch on the foliage. This 

 species will probably be found in all localities where its food-plant 

 is a native, and may also infest other species, as Mr. Tryon 

 recently sent it to me from Brisbane. 



SUPPLEMENT. 



In the following pages are described several additional species 

 belonging to the subfamily Aj^halarinoi^ which have been obtained 

 or determined since the first portion of this paper was published. 

 I hope to be able to add a considerable number to the already 

 large list of Australian Psyllidce, as I still have the earlier stages 

 of a number of species worked out, but am waiting for more 

 material to enable me to describe the perfect insects. 



Aphalara fuscipennis, n.sp. 

 (Plate xiv., fig. 10.) 



Larva bright orange-yellow, eyes red, tips of antennae black. 

 Head truncate in front, sloping round to eyes, truncate behind; 

 nearly twice as long as thorax; antennae stout, standing out on 

 either side; eyes small, set far back in head; thorax very short; 

 legs stout; abdomen constricted at base, rounded on sides, elongate. 

 Front of head and legs clothed with a number of fine hairs, with 

 much longer ones fringing the apical segments of abdomen, from 

 which project a number of long white filaments. 



Pupa light brownish-yellow ; antennae and legs fuscous, the 

 tips of both black; two club-shaped blotches on head, wing-covers, 

 two fine spots on sides and eight in centre of thorax, four slender 

 marks on basal and the whole of the apical segments of abdomen 

 dark brown. Head broad, rounded, truncate at base; antennae 

 short; eyes large, elongate, slightly projecting; thorax almost 

 angular, wing-covers long, rounded at tips; legs long, stout; 

 abdomen large, constricted at base, swelling out, rounded on 

 sides, anal segment arcuate at tip, with numerous long filaments 

 forming quite a tail behind. 



