120 



Though this form is not likely to be endemic, I have not been 

 able to identify it, generically or specifically, with anything pre- 

 viously described. 



Psallus swezeyi sp. nov. 



Very close to P. sharpianus, but smaller, the tegminal macu- 

 lations much larger, and the abdomen is black. 



2 Greenish testaceous, irregularly suffused witii sanguineous, espe- 

 cially on the tegmina. Head and pronotum irregularly speckled with 

 black and red, the latter with a large nebulous dark spot submedially 

 on each side. Tegmina with large blackish spots, especially down the 

 corium, cuneus hyaline, its margins pale ruddy; veins of membrane 

 reddish orange, medially suffused with blackish. First, third and 

 fourth segments of antennae blackish, the second yellowish. Under- 

 side blackish, legs testaceous, fore and middle femora sparsely marked 

 with dark, hind femora with large purplish brown spots so that the 

 whole femur appears dark, except the base and apex. Tibial hairs and 

 the points they spring from black. Pubescence golden yellowish, hairs 

 black. The tegmina are more rounded exteriorly than in P. shari)iauiis. 

 Ovipositor apically orange. 



Length: 21/2 mill. 



Hab. : Oahu, Waianae Mountains, 2,000 feet. (Swezey). 



Fidvius peregrinator sp. nov. 



This Mirid is allied structurally to F. oxycarenoides, but has 

 a very different general appearance. 



^ 9 . Fulvous, the vertex with 2 longitudinal stripes, which con- 

 tinue onto and down the pronotum, which has also lateral stripes of 

 the same color, the 4 continuing more obscurely onto the fore margin 

 of the scutellum, which is otherwise black. The upper surface (at rest; 

 except the membrane) with short, pale golden pubescence. Antennae 

 and labium pale fulvous, apical third of the second segment paler, third 

 and fourth segments fuscous. Tegmina dark testaceous basally, the 

 rest dark fuscous (with a fulvous tint partly in the 9 , the ^ being 

 paler and more obscure) ; apical angle of the corium next the cuneus 

 orange. Cuneus black, fuscous interiorly. Veins of the iower wings 

 almost colorless. Beneath blackish, or very dark piceous, the incisures 

 pale partly, femora dark piceous, apices of fore and middle femora 

 paler, the rest of the legs fusco-testaceous. Vertex triagular in front 

 of the eyes, about as long there as behind it, scarcely wider between 

 the eyes than the eyes together. Beneath, a single eye is about as 

 wide as the gula. First segment of antennae extends for about half its 

 length beyond the apex of the vertex, second about two and one-third 

 longer than the first and about equal to the base of the pronotum, third 

 and fourth short. The fore margin of the pronotum is roundly emargi- 



