92 
Leialoha oceanides (Kirk.). Figure 1. 
Aloha oceanides Kirk. Faun. Haw. II, 6, p. 580. 
One male specimen that I identify as this species taken on 
Waialeale Trail, Kauai, elevation four thousand to five thou- 
sand feet (J. A. Kusche, May, 1920). One male Kalalau, 
Kauai, off Osmanthus, and one female from Alakai swamp 
(Swezey, August, 1921). The aedeagus is thin, cylindrical, 
very slightly curved, the apex produced into a curved spine; 
slightly basad of apex. There is a long, curved spine, and still 
more basad is another much shorter and slightly curved. 
Leialoha suttoniae sp. n. Figure 2, 2a. 
Male. Macropterous; length, 2.3 mm.; tegmen, 3 mm. Length of 
vertex equal to width, slightly broadest near apex, apex rounded or 
bluntly conical, base about middle of eyes. Length of face 1.6 times 
the width, widest in middle, sides slightly curved, two distinct median 
carinae. Antennae reaching to base of clypeus, first joint annulate, 
second three times the length of first. 
Opening of pygofer subdiamond shape, wider than long, margins entire, 
anal emargination large, anal angles large, considerably produced and 
truncate at apex, surrounding about three-fourths of anal segment. 
Aedeagus long, cylindrical, thin, slightly curved, apex bent at right angle 
to form a crook which is fairly straight to near tip, which is curved 
and acute, with some minute teeth along it; slightly basad of the crook 
is a small spine. 
Vertex and nota black or dark brown, clypeus lighter brown, face, 
genae, antennae, lateral portions of pronotum, tegulae and legs yellow 
or very light brown; abdomen dark brown with yellow pleura. Tegmina 
hyaline, a dark fuscous mark from base to apex over median and cubital 
area, including the apical radial cells, veins same color as membrane, 
tubercles small, numerous. Wings fuscous, veins dark. 
Female. Macropterous; length, 2.7 mm.; tegmen, 3.5 mm. Similar to 
males but lighter in color, some specimens being reddish yellow, the fus- 
cous on tegmen very faint and the veins reddish. 
Described from five males and thirteen females from Kala- 
lau, Kauai, off Suttoma sandwicensis (Swezey, August 20, 
1921). ‘There are also four males and two females from Nua- 
lolo, Kauai, off the same plant, which are all lighter in color 
with red veins, a dark spot at apex of clavus, and the hind 
femora and apex of tibiae black or dark fuscous. These speci- 
mens are not included in the type material. The nymphs vary 
in color, becoming darker as they increase in size, the larger 
