Lygeide. 75 
I, sabuleti, fal/.— Elongate, flat, parallel-sided, black. 
Head and pronotum clothed with a close greyish pubescence; 
antennz black, with the second and fourth joints subequal 
in length, the third shorter; pronotum slightly narrower 
in front than behind, its anterior angles largely rounded, 
its base sinuate, disc flat, basal margin, at least near 
the posterior angles, pale; scutellum black; elytra pale 
ochreous, with a dark line running parallel to the margins 
of the corium in the undeveloped form, the space between 
it and the apical margin of the corium in the developed 
form entirely brown, membrane in the developed form 
slightly dusky with brown nervures ; abdomen clothed with 
fine grey pubescence, edges of the connexivum ochreous ; 
legs with the apices of the femora, the tibize and tarsi 
testaceous, apical joint of these last black. 
L. 4-44 mm. 
Folkestone ; Merton, Power ; in August and September. 
HENESTARINA. 
HENESTARIS, Spin. 
Easily known from all our other genera of the Lygwide 
by the pedunculate eyes. The head is short, the cheeks 
nearly as long as the central lobe, antenniferous tubercles 
small, inferior, vertex produced laterally into a process 
on each side, which bears the eye at its apex ; pronotum 
more or less trapezoidal ; abdomen in the ¢ with the 
genital segments visible from above ; legs simple. There are 
only two European species, both of which occur im this 
country. 
(2) 1. Eyes on very long pedicels, reaching far be- 
yond the anterior margin of the pronotum . LATICEPS. 
(1) 2. Eyes on shorter pedicels, reaching only slightly 
beyond the pronotum and nearly embracing 
its anterior angles. . a : . HALOPHILUS, 
H. laticeps, Curt.—Ochreous, with darker markings 
