26 Flemiptera-fleteroptera. 
slightly tinged with brown; beneath bronzy, sides of the 
abdomen beneath, and connexivum ‘above spotted with 
yellowish ; legs testaceous, femora spotted with black. 
L. 5-6 mm. 
New Forest, T. B. Wells, Darenth Wood; Weybridge, 
Billups ; Hawkhurst, Butler ; Esher, Chatham, Champion ; 
Tonbridge, Whittlesea, Blutch ; Folkestone, Rye. 
E. eneus, Scop,—Greenish ochreous, strongly pune- 
tured, posterior angles of pronotum produced. Head 
bronzy, elongate, central lobe not so long as the cheeks, 
antenne with the fourth and fifth joints black, extreme 
base of the fourth pale ; pronotum with the anterior mar- 
gin sinuate, its angles slightly produced laterally, sides 
sinuate, posterior angles produced and pointed, extending 
considerably beyond the base of the elytra; base produced, 
its central portion straight; disc strongly punctured, 
raised posteriorly, near the front margin are two indefinite 
bronzy patches; scutellum punctured, at each side of the 
base a prominent smooth pale callosity ; elytra punctured, 
membrane dusky; abdomen with the connexivum pale, 
spotted with black ; beneath bronzy in the centre, the sides 
pale, stigmata black ; legs pale, the femora sprinkled with 
small black spots. 
L. 43-5 mm. 
Rare, New Forest ; Faversham, J. J. Walker. 
PERIBALUS, Muls. and LR. 
A genus of only a few species, five only being recorded 
from Hurope. It is closely allied to Pentatoma, but the 
structure of the head will distinguish it from that genus. 
We have only one species, whose right to a place in our list 
depends upon a very few specimens taken years ago. I have 
one specimen from the late Mr. Crotch’s collection carded, 
with “ Weston 8. Mare’ written on the back of the card, 
and one without locality frow the late Mr. Harding’s collec- 
