34 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM vol. 71 



ANCHLECHA FENESTRA Fabricius 



Locusta fenestrata Fabkicius, Ent. Syst., vol. 2, 1793, p. 34. 

 One female, Buitenzorg, April 25. 



PSYRA BORNEENSIS Brunner 



Psyra borneensis Brunner, Moaogr. Phaneropt., 1878, pp. 170, 171. 



One male in poor condition from Buitenzorg in March. 



This specimen, which runs out to this species by Brunner's keys, 

 has the posterior legs missing and is imperfect in various other ways. 

 The tegima are marked rather inconspicuously by two longitudinal 

 rows of small brown spots, and the well-developed tympani are 

 blackish; the cerci are similar to those of melanonota except the sub- 

 apical inner tooth is smaller than in a male of that species deter- 

 mined by Hebard from the Moluccas. The antennae are concolorous 

 with the body in the basal half, beyond becoming blackish with narrow 

 light annulations. From tigrina Brunner, the only species described 

 as with maculate tegmina, this specimen differs in various ways and 

 is also decidedly larger, the measurements being as follows : Length, 

 pronotum, 6 mm.; anterior femora, 8 mm.; posterior femora missing; 

 tegima, 46 mm.; width, tegima at middle, 9.5 mm. 



PSYRA UNICOLOR Brunner 



Psyra unicolor Brunner, Monogr. Phaneropt., 1878, pp. 170, 172. 



One male, Mount Salak, no date. 



This specimen is in rather poor condition, having been badly dam- 

 aged by museum pests, but all the essential parts are present and 

 agree almost perfectly with the original description. 



HOLOCKLORA INDICA Kirby 



Holochlora indica Kirby, Syn. Cat. Orth., vol. 2, 1906, p. 430. 



Three males, one female, and a small male nymph from Buitenzorg,^ 

 March, April, and June. 



HOLOCHLORA JAVANICA Brunner 



Holochlora 3 avanica Brunner, Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, vol. 42, 1891, pp. 90, 91. 

 One female, Buitenzorg in March. 



HOLOCHLORA VENOSA? Stal 



Holochlora venosa Stal, Oefv. Vet.-Akad. Forh., ser. 4, vol. 30, 1873, p. 43. 



One female from Buitenzorg in March, evidently collected in spirits. 



The basal folds of the ovipositor are black on their dorsal fourth, 

 the only character at variance with Brunner's description of venosa, 

 in this particular tending toward emarginata and signata, with the 

 descriptions of which it agrees no better, however, than with those 

 of venosa. The subgenital plate is slightly emarginate apically. 



