38 



APPENDIX. FULGOKID.l!. 



face visible above ; face as long as greatest bi'eadth, widened 

 towards clypeus, anterior margin truncate, posterior margin 

 somewhat strongly emarginate, centrally carinate, the margins 

 ampliately reflexed and ridged, an ocellus on each side of posterior 

 margin ; clypeus about as long as face, centrally and laterally 

 ridged ; pronotum exceedingly short, strongly waved and ridged ; 

 mesonotum longer, but not twice as long as pronotum and vertex 

 togetlier, tricarinate ; abdomen moderately robust ; tegmina less 

 than twice as long as greatest breadth, costal margin distinctly 

 waved, moderately but distinctly broadened towards apices, which 

 are rounded, claval vein not reaching apex; wings a little shorter 

 and broader than tegmina ; posterior tibife unarmed. 

 Allied to the genus Kirhi/ana from Ceylon. 



3184. Commolenda deiista, DisT. A. M. X. H. (8) viii, p. 741 (1911). 



Vertex, pronotum, mesonotum, face, and sternum fuscous 

 brown ; legs ochraceous ; abdomen black, the apical area and 

 narrow segmental margins ochraceous ; wings hyaline, the veins 



Fig. 23. — Coiiiiiiolenda ilcu^ta. 



thickly covered with small dark granules, basal half with numerous 

 small fuscous spots, of which the largest one is above the clavus, 

 on apical half several waved fuscous lines, the apices of the apical 

 veins also fuscous ; wings hyaline, the veins darker. 



Length excl. tegm. 3 ; exp. tegm. 11 millim. 



Hab. Central India {Brit. Mus.). 



A single specimen thus labelled is the only one that I have 

 !ie<m of this species. 



Genus CANEIRONA. 

 Caneirona, Bist. Trans. Linn. Soc. LomJ., Zool. 1915.* 



Type, C. macuiipennis, Dist., from the Seychelles. 



Distribution. JSeychelle Islands and Southern India. 



Vertex about as broad as long, the lateral margins strongly 

 carinate, the anterior margins with a short central spine (some- 

 times almost obsolete), the lateral angles also shortly spinose 



* The description of this genus is now in coui-se of publication by the 

 Linnean Society of London, in a paper devoted to the Homoptera of the 



Seychello Islands. 



