MORGAN HEBARD 175 



roundly produced but showing a slight truncation, so that its free margin in 

 large part coincides with that of the sinistral lobe of the supra-anal plate, 

 this production with surface broadly concave and hairy, the free margin 

 thence transverse to the dextral style, situated at the dextral base of the 

 plate. Styles simple, elongate, cylindrical and similar, situated on the free 

 margin of the subgenital jjlate at the iimer margin of the cerci and equal to 

 half the length of the exposed portion of the cercus (or slightly more elongate). 

 Cephalic femora with a fringe of hairs on ventro-cephalic margin, other 

 ventral femoral margins with a single heavy and moderately elongate distal 

 spine, except caudal margin of caudal femora which bears no distal spine. 

 Large jiulvilli present on four proximal tarsal joints. Moderately large 

 arolia present between the symmetrical tarsal claws, which have no internal 

 flange, but have the internal margin microscopically serrulate. 



Dorsal surface rich fiber green,-' fading toward hyaline laterad on pro- 

 notum, in tegminal marginal field and between veins distad on tegmina, area 

 between mediastine and humeral veins often very slightly yellowish. Head 

 ocher red, frequently paling to buffy on face. Eyes blackish brown. An- 

 tennae light ochraceous-tawny, with a blackish brown annulus in distal 

 jiortion including five (normal in series, varying to nine) joints. Limbs and 

 abdomen probably green-yellow in life, the former buffy except distad in 

 dried material. 



The measurements of the type are given first, followed by the extremes in 

 the paratypic males. Length of body, 14.5, 13.2 to lo.O; length of jjronotum, 

 4.9, 4.8 to 5.2; width of pronotum, 6.3, 6.2 to 6.7; length of tegmen, 17, 15.6 

 to 17.3; width of tegmen, 5.9, 5.7 to 6; width of tegminal marginal field, 

 1.1, 1 to 1.1 mm. 



In ;i(klition to the type, a scries of forty-seven paratypic 

 males are before us, bearing the same data, except that they 

 were taken from July 28 to September 2, 1918. 



Panchlora montezuma Saussure and Zehntner 



1893. Patichlora viontezuma Saussure and Z(>lintiicr, Biol. Ccnt.-.\mer., 

 Orth., I, I). 98. [cf, 9 ; Presidio of Mazatlan, [Sinaloa,] Mexico.] 



Villa Union, IX, 27, 1918, 7 d^, 2 9. Venvidio, VI, 10 to 

 VIII, 12, 1918, 51 cf , 14 9. 



The original description is apparently carelessly drawn in 

 some respects. The interocular space in males before us is 

 narrow, varying from less than one-sixth to one-fifth the occipital 

 ocular depth. The antennae are blackish brown, becoming 

 pale, ochraceous-tawny, mesad and at the tips, rarely the meditm 

 portion is also dai'k, while occasionally the ])roximal portion is 



-''' In the series very rarely showing a very minute, stout spine mesad on 

 this margin. 



^' A deeper green than in cube>isiti and its allies, 



TRANS. AM. ENT. SOC, XLVIII. 



