64 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



neither with Linne's type in the collection of the Liunean Society 

 of London, nor with his description. Generally distributed. 



13. A. DISTINCT A (Fieber). 14. A. striata (Linne) (=/ai'/e;a'i, 

 Fieber). 15. A. sahlbergi (Fieber). 16. A. linnei (Fieber). 

 All common and generally distributed. 



(To be continued.) 



AN APPARENTLY UNDESGRIBED SPECIES OF 

 CICADID^ FROM CHILL 



By W. L. Distant. 



Tettigades nlnaria, sp. n. 



Body black, brownly pilose ; margins of pronotum, lateral and 

 posterior margins of mesonotum, cruciform elevation, rostrum, and 

 legs, ochraceous ; a central fascia to base of cruciform elevation and 

 centres of its anterior angles, anterior tibise and tarsi, streaks to 

 anterior femora, bases and apices of intermediate and posterior tibife, 

 and the tarsi, black; disk of abdomen beneath ochraceous, and in 

 male with a central black longitudinal fascia ; tegmina and wings 

 hyaline, talc-like, transversely wrinkled, both slightly sanguineous at 

 base ; tegmina with the venation black, the costal membrane, basal 

 cell, the ulnar veins here and there, and the claval suture, ochraceous ; 

 in some specimens the apical veins are also more or less sufiused with 

 ochraceous ; wings with the venation black, more or less ochraceous at 

 base; tegmina elongate, about three times as long as greatest breadth, 

 the ulnar areas long and narrow, parallel, the first, second, and third 

 about equal in length. Long. excl. tegm., <? and ? , 19 to 22 mill. ; 

 exp. tegm. 55 to 70 mill. 



Hah. Chili (Colls. Dist. and Paris Mus.). 



There are three species of Tettigades from Chili in my col- 

 lection which may be thus differentiated. 



A. Second ulnar area shorter than first or third. 



a. Tegmina broad, about two and a half times 



longer than greatest breadth . . . T. chilensis, A. & S. 

 aa. Tegmina only about twice as long as 



greatest breadth . . . . . T. cowpacta, Walk. 



B. First, second, and third ulnar areas about equal 



in length. 

 aaa. Tegmina elongate and narrow, about 



three times as long as greatest breadth . T. nlnaria, Dist. 



