62 APPENDIX.— FULGORID^. 



more than twice as long as broad, widened toward apex, costal 

 margin distinct]}' sinnato near base, two transverse veins near 

 middle, five or six anteapical cells separated from tlie apical cells 

 by a curved series of transverse veins, the apical cells moderately 

 long and narrow, the uppermost, before apex, oblique ; wings a 

 little shorter than tegmina, slightly more than twice as long as 

 broad, tv\o transverse veins near middle and a short angulate 

 apical cell. 



By the face slightly projecting before the eyes and the short 

 clypeus, this genus is allied to Kosalya, Dist., from which it 

 differs by the totally different structure of the face and the non- 

 spiued posterior tibite. 



3:216, Ambalangoda insignis, List. A. M. N. H. (8) ix, p. 188 



(1912). 



Vertex and pronotvnn ochraceoas, mesonotum piceous with 

 the longitudinal carinate disk ocliraceous ; abdomen piceous or 

 black ; face black, the ampliate margins brownish ochraceous and 

 somewhat darkly maculate ; clypeus brownish ochraceous, the 

 margins darkly maculate near base and apex ; sternum and legs 

 dull ochraceous and more or less darkly maculate ; tegmina for 

 about half the length dull ochraceous with the veins darker, the 



Fig. 47. — Ambalanf/oda liisiffms. 



whole apical area more dull greyish, with a broad and ill-defined 

 slightly curved fuscous fascia near the apical margin, the veins to 

 the three upper subapical cells distinctly infuscated at the apices, 

 clavus white, with some black spots at its upper margin and 

 another at its apex; wings very pale fuliginous with the veins 

 darker. Structural characters as in generic diagnosis. 



Length excl. tegm. 3 ; exp. tegm. 9 millim. 



Hab. Ceylon ; Ambalangoda {Green). 



3217. Ambalangoda fasciata. sp. n. 



Body and legs brownish ochraceous ; tegmina subliyaline, the 

 veins setigerous, basal area (more or less), an oblicjue fascia 

 extending from near middle of costal margin to inner apical angle. 



