134 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



83. Gelatopoea bicolor Brunner. 



Gelalopaa bicolor Brunner, I. c, p. 12, pi. 2, fig. 19 (1891); Kirby, Sj-n. Cat. 

 Orth., II, p. 439 (1906). 



Only a single specimen of each of the two sexes of this interesting 

 insect are at hand. They were collected by A. I. Good at Lolodorf. 

 The male was taken in May, 1914, and the female in October, 1913. 

 C. M. Ace. No. 5264. 



Genus EuRYCORYPHA Stal. 



Eurycorypha StAl, Qifv. Vet.-Akad. Forh., XXX (4), p. 40 (1873); Ib., Recens. 

 Orth., II, p. 18 (1874); Brunner, Mon. Phan., pp. 27, 272 (1878); Ib., Verh. 

 K. K. Zool.-Bot. Ges. Wien, XLI, pp. 19, 136 (1891); K.\rsch, Berlin, Ent. 

 Zeitschr., XXXVI, p. 425 (1888). 



Still another common African genus of the family Phaneropteridse 

 is known as Eurycorypha. These insects are mostly above medium 

 in size and recall such American genera as Phylloptera and Micro- 

 centnim. Twenty species are listed by Kirby in his Synonymic 

 Catalogue of the Orthoptera. There seems to be an additional one 

 at hand, at least it does not agree with any hitherto described species. 



84. Eurycorypha aequatorialis Krauss? 



Eurycoryphus ccquatorialis Kr.a.uss, Zool. Jahrb., Sj'st., V, p. 663, pi. 45, fig. 9 

 (1890). 



A single female of what appears to be this species is at hand. It 

 comes from Lolodorf, where it was taken in November, 191 3, by A. I. 

 Good. C. M. Ace. No. 5264. 



85. Eurycorypha cereris (Stal)? 



Phylloptera cereris Stal, CEfv. Vet.-Akad. Forh., XIII, p. 170 (1856). 

 Eurycorypha cereris StAl, /. c, XXX (4), p. 4 (1873); Ib., Recens. Orth., II, p. 39 



(1874); Brunner, Mon. Phan., pp. 272, 273 (1878); Ib., Verh. K. K. Zool.-Bot. 



Ges. Wien, XLI, p. 136 (1891). 



Another species, also represented by a single female, belonging to 

 the genus Eurycorypha is referred with some doubt to E. cereris of 

 Stal. It bears a resemblance to both brevicollis Stal, and securifera 

 Brunner. The specimen was taken by Good at Lolodorf, Dec. 29, 

 1913. C. M. Ace. No. 5264. 



The characters employed by Brunner in his Synoptical key are 

 based principally on the males, hence the doubtful reference of the 

 specimens now at hand, which all belong to the other sex. 



