1915.| ip I. Hancock: Indian Tetriginae (Acrydiinae). 87 
balis, Bol.” This species recalls the genus Paratettix in the cha- 
racters of the vertex, yet the lateral lobes at the posterior angles 
are laminate, the angle truncate behind and the apex prominent. 
It materially differs from Paratettix variabilis, Bol., in many res- 
pects. 
Criotettix aequalis, Hancock. 
(Fig. 3, Plate xiv.) 
Hanc., Mem. Dept. Agric. India, iv, p. 136, 1912. 
Habitat.—Bengal, Probsering, Lebong, 5000 ft. (Author’s 
coll.) 
Criotettix montanus, Hancock. 
(Fig. 1, Plate xiv.) 
Hanc., Mem. Dept. Acric. India, iv, pp. 133, 134, 1912. 
Habitat.—Punjab, Simla, 7000 ft. (Author’s coll.) 
Criotettix annandalei, sp. nov. 
(Fig. 6, Plate xiv.) 
Near gvavelyt, Hancock. Stature smaller; coloured fuscous, 
obscurely variegated with lighter brown, hind femora obscurely pale 
mottled. Vertex narrower than one of the eyes, subgranulose, 
fossulate on each side of the median carina, widened backward ; 
head not exserted; antennae inserted between the lower angles of 
the eyes, not wholly between the eyes; frontal costa compresso- 
elevated arcuate between the antennae, not so roundly produced 
as in gravelyi. Pronotum deplanate on the dorsum, little convex 
between the shoulders, dull rugose-granulose, behind the shoulders 
bifossulate and the surface on the base of the process more or less 
pitted and tuberculose as in Eugavialidium, prozonal carinae for- 
ward behind the front border lightly expressed, subparallel ; pos- 
terior process subulate and acute produced much beyond the hind 
femoral apices; median carina of pronotum very low and thin, 
following the inequalities, obsolete forward behind the anterior 
margin; elytra elongate-ovate, apices rounded; wings extended 
to the apex of the pronotal process; posterior angles of the lateral 
lobes laminate and produced in an oblique acute spine on each side, 
anterior femoral margins subentire; middle femoral margins above 
minutely crenulate, subundulate, below undulate, very indistinctly 
bilobate; hind femora rather stout, margins above crenulate and 
often beating very indistinct pale crenulate lobes, or absent, below 
margins subentire; pulvilli of the first joint of the hind tarsi sub- 
acute, not at all spinose, the third pulvillus longer than the second 
and planate below. 
Entire length of male and female 14°5 17 mm.; pronotum I3°5 
mm.; posterior femora 6-7 mm. 
Habitat.—Paresnath, W. Bengal (Chota Nagpur), 4300 ft., 
April 15, 1909 (N. Annandale). 
