24 BE. T. Atkinson—Notes on Indian Rhynchota. [No. 1, 
Genus Muraurus, Stal. 
Hem. Afric. iv, p. 151 (1866). 
Head not or but very slightly callous behind the eyes, this callous part 
seen from the side forming a narrow margin behind the eyes, the cepha- 
lic process short and slender; vertex, the dise of the thorax, and scutellum 
lying in the same plane; frons and clypeus long, the former tricarinate, the 
latter unicarinate in the middle; second joint of the antenne short, 
subglobose ; rostrum extending beyond the apex of the last coxa: tho- 
rax carinate in the middle: apical two-thirds of the tegmina very dense- 
ly reticulated, costa very slightly dilated; the two claval veins unit- 
ed behind the middle: feet long, slender; first pair of coxe, oblong, 
scarcely reaching the apex of the clypeus ; first femora scarcely dilated 
beneath, armed with a small minute tooth near the apex ; tibie simple, 
longer than the first femora, last pair 6-spined (Stal). 
22. METAURUS RETICULATUS, Stal. 
Metaurus reticulatus, Stal, Berlin Ent. Zeitschr. x, p. 391 (1866). 
?. Pale yellow-virescent: tegmina pale yellow-greenish-hyaline, 
veins greenish ; wings somewhat colourless: the small tubercle placed 
on the gene before the upper part of the eyes and a small anterior spot 
on the sides of the thorax behind the eyes, black and shining : cephalic 
process short, slender, twice as long as the thorax, turning upwards; 
frons oblong, very slightly roundly amplified towards the apex, narrowed 
above the middle: thorax with a somewhat indistinct ridge: scutel- 
jum slightly tricarinate : tegmina gradually somewhat amplified towards 
the apex ; stigma with eight ves (Sal). Long, 11; exp. teg., 32 mil- 
lims. 
Reported from Cambodia. 
Genus ANAGNIA, Stal. 
Stettin Ent. Zeit. xxii, p. 149 (1861) ; Hem. Afric. IV, p. 151 (1866). 
Head prominent before the eyes ; frons elongate, tricarinate; cly- 
peus marginate, carinate in the middle : pronotum carinate in the mid- 
dle, posteriorly angularly-emarginate, anteriorly behind the head, 
obtusely angularly-prominent : tegmina extending much beyond the 
abdomen, longitudinal veins on corium forked and united with some 
few transverse veinlets towards the apex: feet rather long, slender, 
first pair of femora dilated beneath, last pair of tibize multispinose : 
allied to Dictyophara (Stal). 
