428 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



General color dark fuliginous, with faint indications of pallid mark- 

 ings on the hind femora and the apical portion of the pronotum; 

 the posterior femora with a rather broad subbasal pale annulus, and 

 the anterior and middle legs faintly annulated. Venter together with 

 the lower valves of the ovipositor pallid. 



Length of body, 9 , II mm., of pronotum, 12.25 mm., of hind femora, 

 7.5 mm. 



Habitat. — One female specimen labeled "Sta. Cruz de la Sierra, 

 Bolivia, 450 m., J. Steinbach " is at hand. This type is in the Carnegie 

 Museum. 



10. Tettigidea gracilicornis Bruner. 



Tettigidea gracilicornis Bruner, Ann. Carnegie Mus„ VII, pp. 125, 128 (1910). 



Habitat. — The single male specimen at hand was collected by J. 

 Steinbach during the month of November, 1909, at Puerto Suarez. 

 It was found at an elevation of 150 meters above sea-level. 



11. Tettigidea chapadensis Bruner. 



Tettigidea chapadensis Bruner, Ann. Carnegie Mus., VII, pp. 125, 130 (1910). 



Habitat.- — Likewise only a single male. It comes from Chapada, 

 Brazil, and bears the accession number 2966. 



12. Tettigidea costalis Bruner. 



Tettigidea costalis Bruner, Ann. Carnegie Mus., VII, pp. 126, 133 (1910). 



Habitat. — This species is also represented by a single male specimen. 

 It was collected by J. D. Haseman at Sao Luiz da Caceres, Matto 

 Grosso, Brazil, during the month of May, 1909. 



Genus Scaria Bolivar. 



Scaria Bolivar, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., XXXI, p. 301 (1887); Hancock, Genera 

 Ins., fasc. 48, p. 69 (1906); Bruner, Ann. Carnegie Mus., VII, p. 140 (1910). 



13. Scaria producta Hancock. 

 Scaria producta Hancock, Genera Ins., fasc. 48, p. 70 (1906). 



Habitat. — The single male specimen at hand comes from Santarem, 

 Brazil. It is a representative of accession number 2966. 



Genus Paurotarsus Hancock. 



Paurotarsus Hancock, Psyche, IX, p. 42 (1900); Ib., Genera Ins., fasc. 48, pp. 70-71 

 (1906); Bruner, Ann. Carnegie Mus., VII, p. 142 (1910). 



