266 AUSTRALIAN PSYLLlD^fi, 



Trloza larvie found in various galls; and are much more like the- 

 sugar-lerp-forming Psyllids. 



ii. Subfamily APHALAMNJE, F. Loew. 

 Front of head either swollen or prolonged into two conical 

 processes, or roughly rugged; eyes prominent. Stalk of cubitus 

 as long as, or longer than stalk of subcosta. 



Genus i. — Euphyllura, Forst, Rheinl. u. Westphal. Verh., 



1848. 

 ii. — Rhinocola, Forst., loc. cit. 

 iii. — Aphalara, Forst., loc. cit. 

 iv. — Psyllopsis, F. Low, Verh. Zool.-Bot. Gesell. Wien. 



xxviii., 1879. 

 v. — Thea, Scott, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1882. 

 vi. — Phytolyma, Scott, loc. cit. 

 vii. — Phyllolyma, Scott, loc. cit. 



viii. — Spondyliaspis, Sign., Ann. Soc. Ent. Franc. 1879. 

 ix. — Cardiaspis, Schwarz, Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington, 

 iv., 1896. 



Genus Ehinocola, Forster. 



Head with eyes prominent; front of head prolonged into two 

 conical processes; central ocellus on inner border of vertex some- 

 what on the edge of the front. Forewings coriaceous, with a 

 distinct stigma; stalk of cubitus longer than that of subcosta; 

 radius quite or almost straight. Genitalia (g) not produced 

 posteriorly into slender processes. 



Riiinocola eucalypti, Maskell. 



Trans. New Zealand Inst. Vol. xxii. (1889), p. 160, pi. x., 

 figs. 3-16. 



Larvce forming no lerp but clinging close to the leaf, with a 

 number of silky white filaments of considerable length trailing 

 out from the sides and tip of the abdomen. They are found in 

 fours or fives upon the tips of the foliage of young blue gums 

 (E. globulus) in all stages of growth. 



