LIST OF HOMOPTEROUS INSECTS. 7V 



forming a slightly acute angle. Body hlack, dark ferruninous be- 

 neath : head as broad as the fore-chest, adorned with a tawny stripe 

 which is interrupted and fonns three parts of a circle in tlie middle : 

 just behind it and adjoining the eyes are two large tawny spots ; face 

 conical, prominent, deep ferruginous: mouth black, ferruginous at 

 the base, reaching the bind-hips: eyes prominent: feelers black: 

 scutcheon of the fore-chest adorned with three tawny spots, the 

 middle one club-shaped, the side pair nearly oval ; hind-scutcheon 

 dark ferruginous, its sides hardly angular : scutcheon of the middle- 

 chest adorned with six tawny marks, the middle pair very small, the 

 next pair nearly conical, the outer pair longer; hind border dark 

 ferruginous, slightly excavated : abdomen obconical, longer than 

 the chest, clothed with ferruginous hairs : legs ferruginous ; shanks 

 darker than the thighs; feet black; fore-lhighs armed with three 

 tawny teeih : wings more iridescent than usual, adorned with blue 

 and purple lustre, brown and tawny and marked with black at the 

 base ; veins bright tawny : longitudinal veins towards the lips and 

 cross-veins clouded with brown ; 6aps tinged with brown, bright 

 pale red towards the base. Length of the body 21 lines: of the 

 wings 60 lines, 



a—f. New Holland. 



2. Fl Die IN A MANSIFEIlA. 



Tettigonia manuifera, Fahr. Syst. Rhyn. 36, 13. Stall, Cic. 88, 



pi. 23, f. 126.' 

 Cicada mannifera, Germ. Silb. Rev. Ent. ii. 56, 1. Biirm. Handb. 



Ent. ii. 1, 183, 8. Blanch. Hist. Ins. iii. 167, 15. 

 Cicada cantatrix ? Germ. Thon, Arch. ii. 2, 5, 36, 51. 



(/. Brazil. Presented by J. G. Children Esq. 

 6, c. Brazil. From Mr. Mornay's collection. 

 d — <i Brazil. 



3. FiDiciNA RECTA, Fem. 



Nervus transversus lus fere rectus, valde obliquus, anyulum perob- 

 tiisum Jingens, 2o fere triplb ejus lonyitudine divisus ; 2us 

 subcurvus, valde obliquus, angulum perobtusum jingeiis, \i 

 dimidio vix longior ; dus umlatus, subobliquus, angulum vix 

 acutum Jingens ; Aus undatus, obliquus, angulum acutum Jin- 

 gens, 'So multb longior. 



Second marginal areolet full seven-eighths of the length of the 

 first : first cross-vein nearly straight, very oblique, forming an ex- 

 tremely obtuse angle, parted from the second by nearly thrice its 



