Dec, 1914] Funkhouser: Membracid^ from the Andes. 275 



1912. List of Insects Collected by the "Albatross" Expedition in Lower Cali- 

 fornia in 191 1, with Description of a New Species of Wasp. 



< Bulletin Am. Mus. Xat. Hist., 31 : 323-326. 



1912. Book Notice. Genera Insectorum, Diriges par P. Wytsman, 103-me 

 Fasicule. Lepidoptera, Heterocera, Family Geometridae, by Louis 

 P. Prout, 1910. < Jour. N. Y. Ento. Sec, 20: 195—197. 



1912. Miscellaneous Notes and Descriptions of North American Geometridae. 



< Jour. N. Y. Ento. Soc, 20 : 282-292. 



1912. Types of Insects, Except Lepidoptera and Formicidae, in the American 

 Museum of Natural History Additional to those Previously Listed. 



< Bulletin Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 31 : 353-379. 



1912. A Review of the Species Comprising the Glaucina-Ccenocharis Group. 



< Bulletin Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 31 : 381-407. 



19 1 3. John B. Smith as a Lepidopterist. < Proceedings Staten Island Asso- 



ciation Arts and Sciences, 4: 28—31. 

 19 1 3. Bibliography of the Published Writings of Professor John B. Smith. 



< Proceedings Staten Island Association Arts and Sciences, 4 : 



32-54- 

 19 13. The Relation of Mosquitoes to their Environment. < Jour. N. Y. 

 Ento. Soc, 21 : 55-61. 



I 



REPORT ON A COLLECTION OF MEMBRACIDAE 



FROM THE COLOMBIAN ANDES, TAKEN BY 



MR. JOHN THOMAS LLOYD.^ 



By W. D. Funkhouser, 

 Ith.aca, N. Y. 



Through the courtesy of Mr. John Thomas Lloyd I have been 

 permitted to examine a small but very interesting- series of insects be- 

 longing to the family Membracidse, collected by Mr. Lloyd in the 

 central Cordilleras in the spring of 1912, and representing a part of 

 the collection made by Mr. Lloyd and Dr. A. A. Allen on their trip 

 to this region. Only eight species are represented in this collection, 

 but of these, one is new, and several of the others are of much 

 interest on account of their rarity and the fact that they have seldom 

 been mentioned in literature. The synonymy and bibliography of the 

 South American forms of the Membracidae are in so much confusion 



1 Contribution from the Entomological Laboratory of Cornell University. 



