116 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



ferruginous, the pronotum, pleura, and hind femora marked with 

 • maculae, lines, and bands of black. Wings pale rose, becoming 

 flavous apically (cf , ?; 9 , 25 mm.). Habitat, Congo 



roseus Giglio-Tos. 

 bb. More conspicuously colored or marked. The prevailing color variable 

 but the markings yellow. 

 c. Wings pale blue, the margins and apex somewhat infuscated. Size 



(c?', ?; 9 , 25 mm.). Habitat, Congo cyaneus Bolivar. 



cc. Wings variable, but never blue or bluish. ' 



d. Wings smoky orange at base, becoming fuscous apically. 



e. Smaller (cT, 21 mm.; 9, 28 mm.). Head, pronotum, 

 sides of meso- and meta-thorax and hind femora shining 

 black, conspicuously mottled and banded with yellow. 

 Geniculae and hind tibiae with tarsi carmine. 



festiviis Karsch. 

 ee. Larger (cf , 26 mm.; 9 ■ 32 mm.). Head, with front and 

 cheeks anteriorly flavous, occiput and cheeks back of 

 eyes, dorsum, middle of lateral lobes of pronotum, to- 

 gether with sides of meso- and metathorax and hind 

 femora with two wide bands and apex black; the occiput 

 at sides, the pronotum at sides of disc, and on lower 

 edge, the pleura above the coxae of median and posterior 

 legs streaked with yellow, hind femora also conspicuously 

 marked with yellow. Hind tibite fuscous. 



cataniopoides sp. nov. 

 dd. Wings more pallid, greenish, or amber. 



e. Larger (cf, 28 mm.; 9, ?). Disc of wings greenish. 



Antennae very long anlennatus Bolivar. 



ee. Smaller (c?', 21 mm.; 9, 30 mm.). Disc of wings pale 

 amber. Antennae normal ornatiis Giglio-Tos. 



44. Stenocrobylus festivus Karsch. 



Slenocrobylus festivus Karsch, Berlin. Ent. Zeitschr., XXXVL P- 190 (1891); 

 w KiRBY, Syn. Cat. Orth., HI, p. 485 (1910). 



A. I. Good collected one male and two females of S. festivus at 

 Lolodorf in August, 1913. C. M. Ace. No. 5264. 



45. Stenocrobylus catantopoides n. sp. 



Similar to S. antennatiis Bolivar in color and markings, as well as in 

 the unusual length of the antennae, but considerably smaller, and 

 having the general color above dark fuscous, instead of fuscous green. 

 The present species also is noted for the nearly or quite normal length 

 of the hind tibiae with nine spines externally as in some of the repre- 

 sentatives of the genus Catantops, hence the suggested specific name. 



