E. T. Atkinson—WNotes on Indian Rhynchota. [ No. 3, 
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36. GANA FESTIVA. 
Tettigonia festiva, Fabricius, Syst. Rhyn. p. 41 (1803). 
Cicada thalassina, Percheron, Gen. Ins. (Hém.), t. 2 (1834): Guérin, Voyage La 
Coquille, Ins. p. 183 (1838). 
Cicada percheronii, Guérin, Icon. Régne Animal, p. 355 (1838). 
Geana consobrina, White, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1850; Walker, List Hom. B. M. i, 
p. 254 (1850). 
Geana festiva, Stal, Berl. Ent. Zeitschr. x, p. 170 (1866) ; Hem. Fabr. ii, p. 5 
(1869). 
Black: a testaceous band across the face from eye to eye and around 
each eye: four narrow longitudinal yellow lines on the thorax. Tegmina 
bluish green or greenish yellow, the radial area with a small and larger 
spot below, a median band, three confluent apical patches, and a broad 
apical limbus, black: wings white or bluish, apical part black with a 
white or bluish spot on the disc. Body long 33: exp. teg. 80 millims. 
Reported from Assam, Bengal. 
The Indian Museum possesses specimens from Darjiling and Sikkim. 
Some of these have the tegmina green, others greenish yellow, and, 
in some, the wings have the basal portion and a discal spot bright testa- 
ceous not white or pale, the size and arrangement of the markings on 
the body and tegmina remaining exactly the same. 
37. GHANA MACULATA. 
Tettigonia maculata, Fabricius, Syst. Ent. App. p. 831 (1775) ; Spec. Ins. ii, p. 
319 (1781) ; Mant. Ins. ii, p. 266 (1787) ; Ent. Syst. iv, p. 20 (1794); Syst. Rhyn. 
p. 37 (1803). 
Cicada maculata, Drury, Ill. Nat. Hist. ii, p. 69, t. 37, f. 1 (1773) ; Gmelin, ed. 
Syst. Nat. i, pt. 4, p. 2100 (1782) : Olivier, Enc. Méth. v, p. 750, t. 112, f. 4 (1790) : 
Germar in Thon’s Archiv. ii, fase. 2, p. 12 (1830); in Silbermann’s Rey. Ent. ii, 
p. 74 (1834). 
Geana maculata, Am. et Serv., Hist. Nat. Ins. Hém. p. 464 (1843) ; Walker, 
List Hom. B. M. i, p. 253 (1850). 
?. Black shining: two yellow spots on vertex between the eyes, one 
below each eye: six on mesonotum, four in front, two behind. Tegmina 
black, with five spots, two basal (of which one within radial area is 
minute) and three larger subequal median spots, whitish yellow : a white 
dot in 1—3 ulnar and in all the apical areas except the last. Wings 
black, basal part sordidly white and a sub-apical row of five white dots. 
A form of the ¢ has, instead of the dots or spots in the ulnar and apical 
areas, broad smears of dirty white, and is also larger than the ordinary 
9. Body long 32: exp. teg. $2 millims, ?: body long 40 exp. teg. 
97 millims.  , form last mentioned. 
The Indian Museum possesses specimens from Sikkim, Khasiya 
Hills, Samaguting, and the Dhansiri Valley. 
