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fore and middle tibiae spotted with the same, all tiie tarsi partly 

 pale. Abdomen mostly black. 



Male: genital pieces narrowly margined apically with whitish- 

 ttstaceous and with white bristles. 



Female: pygophor black, with white specks and white bristles 

 on the apical half. 



Length 3 mill. 



Hab. Viti Levu, Rewa (Mch.-Apr., M), Ba (Jan., M.). A 

 jjretty little species. 



JJinotettix. 



On reconsideration, I think I have made a mistake in sinking 

 this name. The whole affair is in a great muddle, hinging largely 

 on the equally muddled Cicadiila, of which the type is really, as 

 ascertained in my former memoir, sinaragdula. Sahlb?rg's Li- 

 inofetfi.v was heterogeneous ; ai^art from one or two disputed spe- 

 cies, variously assigned to Phryiioiiiorphus, Deltocephalus &c., 

 (all prior genera), it is comprised of two main sections, (i)=ra 

 section of the Thauimotettix of Puton's Catalogue (1899) and 

 {2)^Macrosteles Fieber (=Cicadiila Puton). As Woodworth 

 has declared the type to be qtiadriiiotafa (Fabr. ) i. e. of the spe- 

 cies of the first section, and as Edwards (1896) also uses it in 

 tlie same sense, it is perhaps proper to keep it so, with Eulei- 

 inoiiios as a synonym. 



2. filieicola, sp. nov. 



Pale luteous, paler lieneath, pronotum tinged with lirown. An- 

 terolateral margins of vertex broadly black (meeting angulately 

 at apex). Pronotum with 4 dark fuscous lines, the two middle 

 of which continue on to the scutellum. Tegmina with a nearly 

 entire, dark fuscous, longitudin.al median line, 2nd to 4th apical 

 cells hyaline, veins dark, apical margin of the first suffu'-ed and 

 a spot in the middle of the cell. Wings hyaline, vHns fuscous. 

 Abdomen above mcje or less fuscous. 



^Iale : genital segments short, concolorous. 



Female : last segment apically black, roundl\- eiuarginate ; py- 

 gophors pale brownish ferruginous, elongate ; ovipositor black, 

 much longer than the pygophors. 



Length (male) 3 (female) 3>^ mill. 



Hab. Viti Levu, (Nov. Muir's No. 15), Rewa (Apr. M.), 

 on tree-ferns. 



