134 BR, T. Atkinson—Notes on Indian Rhynchota. [No. 3, 
gins of thorax and basal margin of scutellum somewhat testaceous : 
tegmina brown, spotted pale glaucous, and with a paler band, basal half 
with eleven irregularly placed, round, yellow spots, a pale band with 
a transverse row of four round spots of a deeper colour approaching 
fuscous and sheghtly margined inwardly with yellow and the apical fourth 
has eight smaller round yellow spots. Guérin describes his F’. rajah as 
having the cephalic process as long as the body, ascending, brunneous, 
apex somewhat dilated, red: body and feet brunneous ; tegmina blackish 
fulvous, spotted with yellow, a broad pallid band at the apex : wings 
black, blue at the base. Long, 44 millims. 
Reported from Nepal (Don.) ; Malacca (Gwér.). 
12. Funcora mMAcuLATA, Olivier. 
Fulgora maculata, Olivier, Enc. Méth. vi, p. 568 (1791); Stoll, (La Cigale verte 
porte-lanterne) Cigales, p. 98, t. 26, f.143 (1788) ; Burm. Handb. Ent. ii, (i) p. 169 
(1835) ; Westwood, Trans. Linn. Soc. xviii, p. 140 (1841) ; Duncan’s Nats. Lib. 1, 
p. 284, t. 23, f. 2 (1840) ; Butler, P. Z.S. p. 100 (1874). 
Flata maculata, Germar, Thon’s Archiv. ii, fase. 2, p. 46 (1830). 
Hotinus maculatus, Walker, Cat. Hom. B. M. ii, p. 266 (1851). 
Cephalic process almost as long as the body, ascending, recurved ; 
head black ; eyes and antenne grey ; thorax brown, shaded with black : 
abdomen light brown, banded with black, same above and beneath ; 
tegmina aboye black with interrupted bands or continuous rows of 
glaucous spots, apical portion irrorated yellowish-green: wings with 
the basal portion towards the anterior margin and a patch near the anal 
margin, greenish-blue ending in fine rays, apical portions black: feet 
deep brown, posterior pair spinose. Body long te the eyes, 21: cephalic 
process from the eyes 19; exp. teg. 71 millims. 
The Indian Museum possesses a specimen from Ceylon. 
13. Funcora FULVIROSTRIS, Walker. 
Hotinus fulvirostris, Walker, List Hom. B. M. Suppt. p. 41 (1858). 
Butler (P. Z. S. p. 100, 1874) unites this species with I’. maculata, 
Olivier, as a variety, but itis as much entitled to specific rank as breviros- 
tris, viridirostris, and spinole, which are similar varieties of F’. candelaria, 
Linn. It clearly differs from F’. maculata in having the cephalic process 
subpellueid, sordid fulvous-testaceous or tawny instead of opaque 
deep green; the markings on the tegmina follow the arrangement 
of the markings on the tegmina in I’. maculata, but are sordid 
whitish instead of bluish-white, and the wings are sordid greenish-white 
rayed with black-fuscous nearly up to the base, the apex being broadly 
and the external margin less broadly black. 
