134 cicADiD.i:. 



b. Transverse veins at bases of second and third ajiical areas of 

 tegmhia, and at base of upper apical area to ivings, infuscated. 



1632. Cicadatra striata, IFalk. (Cicada) List Horn, i, p. 206 (1850) ; 

 Stal, Ofv. Vet.-Ak. Fork. 1862, p. 482 ; Bist. (Cicadatra) 

 Mu?i. Orient. Cicad. p. 135, t. xv, f. 2,«, b (1892). 

 Cicada anoea, Walk. List Horn, i, p. 207 (1860). 



S. Head blackish, a spot at anterior angles of vertex and a 

 smaller one behind each eye ochraceous ; pronotum dull ochra- 

 ceous with a pale central longitudinal fascia margined with black, 

 the sublateral and subposterior margins and the incisures black ; 

 mesonotum ochraceous, with four obcoiiical spots, the outermost 

 of which are longest and sublateral, a large spot in front of 

 cruciform elevation, and a small spot on each side of same black ; 

 abdomen above black, the posterior segmental margins broadly 

 castaneous ; head beneath blackish ; sternum, legs, and opercula 

 ochraceous ; coxae spotted with black ; abdomen beneath pale cas- 

 taneous, its apex ochraceous ; tegmina and wings hyaline, with 

 their extreme bases reddish-ochraceous, venation pale brownish 

 or fuscous ; tegmina with the transverse veins at the bases of the 

 second and third apical areas infuscated ; wings with the transverse 

 vein at base of upper apical area infuscated. 



§ . Head totally black ; mesonotum nearly black, the spots 

 having coalesced ; abdomen above darker than in male. 



Length excl. tegm., J , 16 ; exp. tegm. 45 millim. 



Hub. Quetta {Coll. Dist.). North Bengal {Miss CamjjbeU, Brit. 

 Mus.). 



Genus SENA. 

 Sena, Dist. A. M. N. H. (7) xv, p. 307 (1905). 



Type, S. qucerida, Pall. 



Distribution. Palfearctic and Oriental Regions. 



Head about as long as space between eyes, lateral margins of 

 front somewhat at right angles to lateral margins of vertex, eyes 

 scarcely projecting beyond the anterior angles of the pronotum ; 

 pronotum shorter than the mesonotum, its lateral margins more 

 or less oblique, the posterior angles being obliquely dilated ; abdo- 

 men longer than the space between apex of head and base of 

 cruciform elevation*; tympana largely exposed, the flaps being a 

 little shorter and very much narrower than the tympanal orifices ; 

 rostrum just passing the intermediate coxae; opercula in male 

 small, transverse, not extending beyond base of abdomen ; anal 

 appendages large. 



Except ill S. acberi, Dist. 



