1917] Parshley—Notes on North American Tingide (Hemiptera) 23 
segment oblong, almost glabrous; second shorter and a little nar- 
rower than the first, wider toward apex, with minute decumbent 
pubescence; third very large, clavate, in basal third more slender 
than the second, in apical third about as wide as the first is long, 
with fine pubescence becoming denser toward apex; fourth seg- 
ment small, conical, more slender than the third at apex, with 
long dense pubescence. Pronotum transversely convex; narrowed, 
subeylindrical, and depressed anteriorly, margins and apical half 
of angulate process depressed, flat; anterior margin arcuate, with a 
slightly elevated collar of one or two rows of areoles; hood repre- 
sented by a small backward extension of the collar; paranota 
reflexed closely against pronotal surface; carine low, slightly diver- 
gent posteriorly, the extreme apices of the lateral outcurved, termi- 
nating at the level of the posterior margin of hood, the median 
percurrent. Hemielytra extending much beyond apex of abdo- 
men, the marginal vein depressed, the costal area reflexed; sutural 
area with somewhat enlarged areoles. Buccule large, curved 
ventrally, angulate posteriorly; rostral sulcus deeper and wider 
posteriorly. Rostrum reaching hind cox. Hind wings extending 
beyond apex of abdomen. Segments of abdomen faintly and irreg- 
ularly striate on apical half. Genitalia much as in allied species. 
Form elongate oval. Length ° 4.5 mm.; width 1.5 mm. 
Short-winged form (fig. 2, B).—Similar in every way to the 
preceding, except that the general form is broadly oval; pronotum 
is flat and less broadened posteriorly; the carinz parallei; hemie- 
lytra but slightly longer than abdomen, the costal margin strongly 
curved, apices narrowly rounded, and sutural area much reduced. 
Length 2 3.7 mm.; width 1.5 mm. 
Holotype: long-winged @, Lakehurst, N. J., 27 June (H. G. B.) 
in Barber’s collection; paratypes: long-winged 9, Smiths Point, 
Fire Island Beach, N. Y., 19 July, 1913 (J. R. T. B.) in de la Torre 
Bueno’s collection; short-winged 9 9, Delaware Water Gap, 4 
September (Mrs. A. T. Slosson) in Barber’s collection; New Haven, 
Conn., 4 September, 1911 (C. E. Olsen) in de la Torre Bueno’s 
collection. 
A specimen from Hampton, N. H., 15 August, 1909 (S. A. Shaw) 
differs from the others in having very slightly shorter and uniformly 
dark antennz and the subcostal area somewhat irregularly and 
asymmetrically reticulated with three rows of areoles in places 
