SUMMANUS. 



117 



face, obscurely obliquely striate on each side ; pronotum with a 

 central longitudinal ridge : mesonotuin tricarinate ; legs of 

 moderate lengtli, tibiae sulcate, posterior tibiae with one spine 

 near apex ; tegiuina less than twice as long as broad, the costal 

 margin moderately convex, the apex rounded, the apical margin 

 obliquely truncate, its posterior angle more or less acutely 

 produced, costal membrane narrower than radial area, the first 

 transversely veined, the latter reticulately veined, the whole 

 tegmen transversely reticulately veined, and a series of longitudinal 

 marginal cells more or less continuous with the costal membrane 

 extending round apex and along apical margin, clavus coarsely 

 granulose ; wings about as broad as tegmina, two transverse 

 veins before apical area. 



This genus is allied to Salurnis, Stal, from whicli it principally 

 differs by the venation of the tegmina, and by the costal and 

 apical marginal series of short longitudinal cells. 



3287. Neosalurnis reticulatus, Dist. A. M. N. H. (8) v, p. 311 

 (1910). 



Head, pronotum, mesonotum, sternum, legs, abdomen beneath, 

 and tegmina greenish ochraceous, abdomen above slightly greyishly 

 tomentose ; wings milky-white, the veins greenish ; apical and 

 sutural margin (beyond clavus) of tegmina finely spotted with 



Fig. 8G. — Neosalurnis reticulatus. 



fuscous brown, posterior margin of clavus more or less fuscous 

 brown ; tegmina with all the veins distinctly prominent and a 

 little darker in coloration ; other structural characters as in 

 generic diagnosis. 



Length excl. tegm. 8 ; exp. tegm. 24 millim. 



Hah. Bhutan {Brit. Mus.). Burma ; Karen Hills (DoJuri)/). 



Genus SUMMANUS, nov. 



Tvpe, 'S'. indiciis, Dist. 



Distribution. South India ; Bombay. 



Head (including eyes) a little narrower than pronotum, vertex 

 angularly produced in front of eyes, tlie apex subconical ; face 

 much narrowed anteriorly, less narrowed towards clypeus, broadest 



