PARACALOCOKIS. 



449 



Fig. '2Sd.^Phi:ji<icoris crinitii^ 



1406. Phytocoris crinitus, sp. n. 



Brownish-ochraceous, thickly 

 tomentose ; lateral and posterior 

 margins of the pronotnm, a 

 central basal fascia to scutellum, 

 clavus, coriura, and cuneus fus- 

 cous ; corium with central and 

 apical paler suft'usions ; membrane 

 pale fuliginous mottled with grey, 

 the veins fuscous ; body beneath 

 fuscous, coxae and legs pale 

 greyish-brown, apical areas of 

 the femora mottled with fus- 

 cous, tibiae annu)lated with fus- 

 cous ; antennae brown, speckled 

 and aunulated with greyish, 

 first joint as long as pronotum, 



second about twice as long as first ; rostrum considerably passing 



posterior coxae. 

 Length 4^ millim. 

 llah. Ce^dou ; Peradeniya (6r>Y'eji). 



1407. Phytocoris stoliczkanus, IJtst. Tr. E. S. 1879, p, 124; id. 



Sec. Yark. Miss., Rhynch. p. 10, f. 6 (1879). 



Uniform pale ochraceous ; head with a V-shaped mark consisting 

 of small transverse striae commencing from near base of antenna, 

 of which the first joint is almost as long as head and pronotum 

 together ; pronotum with two slightly raised transverse callosities 

 extending across and occupying the antei'ior area ; scutellum with 

 the base somewhat raised and gibbous, a waved transverse cordate 

 line near base, and a faint pale longitudinal median line near 

 apex ; hemelytra sparingly clothed with a fcAv minute blackish 

 hairs ; membrane with bright prismatic reflections. 



Length 6 millim. 



Hah. Punjab ; Murree {Sioliczlca). 



Genus PARACALOCORIS. 



Paracalocoris, Dist. Biol. Cetdr.-Am., RJDjnch. i, p. 263 (1883). 



Type, F. jurgiosus, Stal, a Xeotropical species. 



Distribution. Neotropical, Ethiopian, and Oriental Regions. 



Body above distinctly pilose ; antennae with the basal joint 

 incrassated, shorter than the pronotum, thickly clothed with fine 

 long hairs ; second joint about twice as long as first, its apex dis- 

 tinctly iucrassate, third and fourth slender, and together subequal 

 to or longer than the second, fourth generally a little longer than 

 the third ; pronotum distinctly subgibbous, the width at posterior 

 angles being about three times that of anterior margin ; rostrum 

 reaching the intermediate coxae. Pronotum usually with two 

 discal subexcavated spots. 



