no 
BRAZILIAN ORTHOPTERA 
This is a very clearly marked species, the striking peculiarities 
of its coloration greatly assisting in its ready recognition. It will 
be seen to have quite an extensive distribution. 
PSEUDOPHYLLINAE 
Lichenochrus variabilis Brunner 
1895. Lichenochrus variabilis Brunner, Monogr. der Phaneropt., p. 128. 
[Pernambuco, Brazil; Columbia (err. pro Colombia).] 
Ceara-Mirim, Rio Grande do Norte. (W. M. Mann.) Two 
males, one female. 
Natal, Rio Grande do Norte. (W. M. Mann.) Two males, 
three females, one immature male. 
Independencia, Parahyba. (Mann and Heath.) One male. 
The greater portion of this material has been seriously affected 
by immersion in a liquid preservative. The coloration has been 
largely destroyed and nothing but the more decided contrasts of 
the pattern remain in the affected material, while the pronotal 
form apparently has been altered so greatly in some of the males, 
by the action of the preservative on the chitin, that on first 
examination a different species appears to be represented. There 
is, however, no question of the specific identity of the material. 
The size varies very considerably, the majority of the individuals 
being over, rather than under the original measurements. A 
striking feature, not mentioned by Brunner, is the paired lateral 
areas of shining brownish-black on the abdominal segment preced- 
ing the disto-dorsal one. There is a tendency in the same direc- 
tion dorsad on the disto-dorsal segment of the male. 
Teleutias tortus new species (Plate III, figs. 17 and 18.) 
A small species related to T. brevifolius and nigro-tarsatus 
Brunner, from the upper Amazonian region, but differing from 
the former in the shorter tegmina in both sexes, and the shorter 
femora, the non-hirsute disto-dorsal abdominal segment of the 
male and the continuous character of the pronotal cariniform 
markings, which are as distinctly indicated on the metazona as on 
the metazona. From nigro-tarsatus the new form differs in the 
median femora having two or three spines on the ventro-cephalic 
margin, in the shorter cerci of the male, the non-incurved styles 
of the subgenital plate of the same sex and in the third tarsal 
joint not being black. From all the other species of the genus. 
