ii6 FAUNA HAWAIIENSIS 



(4) i' Bythoscopiis vidints Stal. 



Bvthoscopns vid^nts Stal, 1S59, Eugenie's Resa Iiisekter. p. 291. 



Hab. Oahu, Honolulu (Stal) : also from Tahiti. 



I have not identified these two species and have not seen the types. 



Subfam. TETIGONIINAE. 



Of this, the t)pical subfamily, no examples were collected by Perkins. It is 

 possible that they have been overlooked, as the forms are practically cosmopolitan and 

 have considerable powers of distribution, one species, Tetigonia albida Walker, having 

 been recorded from India, Ce.ylon, Madagascar, South Africa, Philippines, North 

 Australia, etc. One genus and species only has been noted from our P'auna, viz. 



Tetigonia Geoffr. 



Tetigonia Geoffroy, 1761 — 62, Hist, abreg. Ins. 1. p 429; Kirk., 1900, Entom, 



XXXIII. p. 262. 

 = TcttiiTonia auctt., nee Linne. 



,s ' 



(i) Tetigoma varicolor, Sign. 



Tettigonia varicolor 'Six^noxftl, 1854, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, (3) 11. p. 15, PI. i, fig. 15. 

 Hal. Oahu, Honolulu. I have not seen this. 



Subfam. JASSIDAE. 



1 have not completed my investigations on this difficult group, and reserve them 

 for a later communication. 



Fam. FULGORIDAE. 



This great family is represented b)- a large number of Asiracinae (which will be 

 treated in another communication) and Fulgorinae ; and a single genus and species 

 of Poekillopterinae. 



Subfam. POEKILLOPTERINAE Kirk. 

 ( = Flatida, etc., Stal, 1866.) 

 I his widely distributed group is represented by a single genus and species. 



