320 PROCEEDINGS: BOSTON SOCIETY NATURAL HISTORY. 
of a delicate pale green, with semi-transparent wing-covers, and 
a pale yellow line running backward from the eye through the sides 
of the pronotum, half the length of the tegmina. These belong 
to the genus Panchlora and have been referred to several 
species: viridis, nivea, hyalina, poeyi, etc. Two species are 
here represented, according to Hebard, as follows: 
Panchlora cubensis (Saussure). 
Augusta, Me., 1906, 9 (U. S. N. M.); Orono, Me., 1892, in 
tropical fruit (Me. Agr. Exp. Sta.) ; Woodstock, Vt. (A. P. M.) ; 
Boston, Mass., Dec. 26, 1878, flying in store, 9 (M. C. Z.); 
Melrose, Mass., June 17, 1914 (F. W. Dodge); Salem, Mass., 
Aug. 12, 1917; Stoneham, Mass., Nov. 15, 1915 (C. V. Black- 
burn); Wellesley, Mass., Dec. 12, 1894, on window; Jan. 9, 1918, 
bananas (A. P. M.). 
Panchlora exoleta (Burmeister). 
Salem, Mass., June 7, 1884, 9 , probably in bananas (Peabody 
Museum, now in Mus. Comp. Zool.). 
Hormetica advena (Scudder). 
Under this name Scudder described a single female Roach taken 
at Belmont, Mass., in December. This was undoubtedly an 
adventive specimen of a tropical species, probably introduced 
with fruit. The species has never been reported since and its 
native country is unknown. 
