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A male example from Queensland. Bundaberg, with the teg- 

 mina more suffused w'th oHvaceous, and the genital segments 

 not tufted, may form another species. 



Loiiafiira. 

 Loiiatiira Usborn & Ball 1898 P. Davenport Ac. Sci., Vll 83. 



I. aiisfrina, sp. no v. 



Closely allied to L. cafaliiia (which 1 presume to be the type), 

 but the head is distinctly longer and the tegmina only reach to 

 the base of the genital segment. Head, pronotnm and scutel- 

 lum pale yellowish, the frons with a pale ferruginous radiating 

 pattern. Tegmina pale olive-green, the veins a little yellow, a 

 broad smoky apical band. Abdomen black, the last segment 

 v/hite, pygophor white and black. Legs yellowish brown soiled 

 with fuscous. 



Length is mill. 



Hab. New South \¥ales, Sydney (Feb., K.); Queensland, 

 Bundaberg (Sept. -Dec. P). 



This tiny species is allied to L. cafaliiia by the venation, Init 

 there is apparently no appendix: and to L. incgalopa bv the frons 

 being longer and basallv more angular and by being patterned, 

 also the lora are remote from the apex of the clypeus. 



Allygus. 



Allygiis Fieber 1875 Rev. Mag. Zool. (3) III, 410. 



I. lofopliagoniin, sp. nov. 



Yellowish-testaceous, marbled with olive-brown on pronotnm. 

 \>rtex with a mark and 6 spots in olive brown. Ocelli orange- 

 red, very conspicuous. Frons yellowish-testaceous, strongly and 

 broadly marked with a black radiating pattern. Genae yellow, 

 margined apically with black and a median black spot. Clypeus 

 and lora black, the former with 2 short pale lines, the latter 

 with a pale spot each. Tegmina milky hyaline, closely marbled 

 with olive-brown, but in parts only, so that there are 3 milky 

 spots along the commissure on the clavus, and 5 or 6 on the 

 corium, the latter less distinct; nodal veins suffused. Legs 

 black with pale bristles, apical half of fore femora black, the 



