SUMA>'GALA, 73 



with fuscous, apically somew liat suffusely. AVings pale smoky, 

 veins fuscous. Abdomen dorsally partly dark fuscous." 



Length 4.4 millim. 



ITah. Ceylon ; Trincomali {T. Bainhrigtje FletcJier). 



Genus SUMANGALA. 

 Sumangala, Dist. A. M. N. II. (8) viii, p. 042 (1911). 



Type, S. dellcatula, Dist. 



Distribution. Ceylon. 



Head rather long, narrow, vertex distinctly projecting beyond 

 the eyes ; face compressed, rounded from vertex, long and narrow, 

 longer than the clypeus ; pronotum very short, the lateral areas 

 dilated and subangularly produced transversely and a little 

 forwardly ; mesonotum broad, broader than long, the lateral 

 margins rounded ; anal appendages bilobate ; tegmina about twice 

 as long as greatest width, much narrower at base than at apex, 

 costal margin rounded, costal membrane broad, with three trans- 

 verse veins, sometimes placed near apex or sometimes one near 

 middle, the other two near apex, about eight apical areas, the 

 ulnar area immediately below radial area very long, radial area 

 narrow ; wings a little narrower and shorter than tegmina, radial 

 area apically broadened, three apical areas, apex of radial area 

 well detined by obliquely transverse veins. 



By the venation of the tegmina this genus is allied to Kennesia, 

 Melich., by the structure of the face it is more allied to IlJiotana^ 

 Walk. 



3230. Sumangala delicatula, Dist. A. M. X. II. (S) viii, p. G43 

 (1911). 



Body and legs pale ocluvaceous ; the compressed margin of face 

 and the sublateral margins to pronotum more or less sanguineous ; 

 tegmina creamy-white, subhyaliue, the veins mostly very pale 

 fuscous, on the apical area some of the veins are infuscated, the 



Sumaiif/ala dcUvatula. 



most prominent of these fuscous markings being at the apex of 

 clavus and continued along the apices of the two cells above it, 

 and a curved line reaching costal margin a little before apex, some 

 of the longitudinal veins defining the lower apical areas bear a 



