278 AUSTRALIAN PSYLLIDJ1, 



reddish-brown. Head very broad between eyes, rounded and 

 lobed in front, truncate at base of antennse, with a distinct median 

 suture and no fovea on sides, deeply arcuate behind. Face lobes 

 short and broad, thickly clothed with fine hairs extending over 

 the face. Antenna? very long and slender, clothed with fine hairs, 

 standing out in front of eye; 1st joint very short and stout, 2nd 

 short, cylindrical, 3rd longest, 4th-9th shorter than 3rd, 10th 

 elongate-oval, not half length of preceding ones. Eyes very 

 large, reniform, angulated on hindmargins; projecting : central 

 ocellus very small, well up from base of median suture; lateral 

 ocelli red, small, close to hindmargin of eyes. Thorax : pronotum 

 small, narrow, terminating in a rounded knob at extremities at 

 inner margin of eyes; dorsulum short, broad, round in front and 

 behind, tuberculate on sides; mesonotum large, arcuate in front, 

 rounded behind; scutellum small. Legs and undersurface lightly 

 clothed with hairs; tibiae long and slender, tarsi large. Wings 

 long, slender, nearly thrice as long as broad, deeply curved at 

 base of costa, rounded at tip; primary stalk long; stalk of sub- 

 costa short; costal cell short, elongate-oval, slightly angular at 

 apex; stigma long and slender; radius long, curving upward and 

 then downward at tip; stalk of cubitus longer than subcosta; 

 upper branch long, curving upward, upper fork longer than lower, 

 both turning down below tip, forming a short angular cell; lower 

 branch of cubitus long, upper fork curving sharply upward, long; 

 lower fork short, turning outward; clavus short, clavical suture 

 very slight. Abdomen short, broad. Genitalia (<J>) short, conical. 

 Hab. — Katoomba, Blue Mts., N.S.W., (caught by sweeping; 

 W. W. Froggatt). 



Rhinocola fuchsia, Maskell. 



Trans. N. Zealand Inst. Vol. xxii p. 162, 1889, pi. x. f. 1325. 



This species was described from New Zealand, but I include it 

 in this paper as another species, R. eucalypti, described therefrom, 

 is common in New South Wales, and the former may also range 

 into Australia. 



