BY F. W. GODING. 9 



cells; costa and radial vein piceous and punctured; destitute of a 

 transverse venule between two ulnar veins, near the base. 



Wings with four apical cells. 



Legs simple. 



Type, D. borealis, Godg. 



Dingkana (dingkan— an insect, in the Koka-Yimidir language) 

 differs from Terentius chiefly in the presence of three discoidal 

 cells, the dorsum more elevated and dome-like, and the absence 

 of a transverse venule between ulnar veins, near base; also in the 

 position of the ocelli. 



■^D. BOREALIS, Sp.nOV. 



(Plate i., fig. 21.) 



Head piceous, finely ,punctured, front strongly inflexed, lobed 

 on each side. 



Prothorax convex, sordid black, finel}'' punctured, narrowed 

 behind lateral angles, extended in a long slender process, not 

 sinuate below, sinuate above, reaching tip of abdomen, and nearly 

 reaching apices of tegmina, the apex strongly and lengthily 

 curved downward, the process touching the interior borders of 

 tegmina the entire length. 



Tegmina vitreous, vinaceous, punctured, ferruginous and opaque 

 at base, radial and costal veins, and those including discoidal 

 cells, ferruginous; second and third discoidal cells of equal length, 

 the first much shorter. 



Tibiae yellowish brown. 



Long. 5; lat. 2 mm. 



Described from one female. 



Type in Coll. F.W.G. 



Hah. — Cairns, Q. (Tryon). 



S E X T I u s, Stal. 



Hemiptera Africana, iv. p. 88. 



Prothorax elevated, perpendicular for a distance from base, 

 with a percurrent median carina, armed on each side, above 



