JAMES A. G. REHN 195 



different species we "woukl restrict the name veteratoria to the 

 9 ," that sex must be considered the restricted type and vetera- 

 toria in consequence replaces the name acuta, over which it has 

 page priority. 



Orphulella punctata (DeGeer) 



1773. Acrydium punctalum DeGeer, Mem. HL-^t. Ins., iii, p. 503, pi. 42, fig. 12. 

 [Surinam.] 



Itatiba, State of Sao Paulo. April, 1910. (J. Lima.) Five 

 males, seven females. 



Amblytropidia ferruginosa Stil 



1873. Almblytropidia] ferruginosa Stil, Recens. Orthop.t., I, p. 107. [Brazil. 



Franga, State of Sao Paulo. January, 1911. (E. Garbe.) 

 One female. 



This specimen agrees very fully with Stal's description of the 

 fastigium, face, frontal costa, pronotum and tegminal form of his 

 species, but is five millimeters longer and the antennae are no 

 longer than the head and pronotum together. The differences in 

 the specimen appear to us to be purely individual, particularly 

 as there is as much size variation in a series of the allied A. robusta. 

 The strongly impresso-punctate pronotal dorsum and subfoveo- 

 late face, as well as the transverse rugosity of the fastigium, ap- 

 pear to be characteristic of the species. 



Bruner has recorded this species from Chapada, State of 

 Matto Grosso. 



Fenestra bohlsii Giglio-Tos 



1S9.5. F( >i(slr(i bohlsii Giglio-Tos, Zoolog. .Jahrh., Abth. fiir Sj-stem., viii, p. 

 807. [Paraguay.] 



Franga, State of Sao Paulo. January, 1911. (E. Garbe.) 

 One female. 



This specimen is inseparable from individuals from Misiones, 

 Argentina and Sapucay, Paraguay. This is the extreme north- 

 eastern point from which the species is known. Northwestward 

 it extends to Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia. 



Scyllina instabilis Rehn 



19()(). Srulliiia iiisldbilis Rehn, Proc. Aead. Xat. Sci. Phiia., litOii, p. 12, figs. 

 14 and 15. [Sao Paulo, Brazil.] 



Estagao Campo Grande, State of Sao Paulo. July, 1902. 

 (M. Wacket.) One male. 



TRAXS. AM. KNT. SOC, XLIV. 



