Capside. 251 
Douglas and Scott; Barnet oaks, Ewhurst, Butler ; Nor- 
folk, Edwards ; Trench Woods, Dorchester, Blatch ; Forres, 
Norman ; Plymbridge, Devon, Bignell. 
L. limbatus, /ull.—Allied to the preceding, but shorter, 
paler and of a yellower colour, with the black markings 
more pronounced, recognizable by the orange-red femora: 
In some varieties the scutellum and the base of the prono- 
tum are nearly black, the clavus brown, and the apical spot 
of the corium very large and black. In some continental 
specimens the base of the pronotum is widely black, as well 
as the whole of the clavus. There are generally two darker 
red rings at the apex of the posterior femora; tibize pale, 
with black bristles rising from black spots. 
L. 5 mm. 
I know of only one locality for this pretty species, Wim- 
bledon Common, where a few specimens were taken by my 
nephew and myself in August, 1880, off Salix. 
L. lucorum, Mey. (var. nigro-nasutus, Reut. nec Stal.). 
—Short oval, very convex, green, clothed with pale hairs, 
shining, punctured, vertex between the eyes about as 
wide as the eye itself, central lobe of the face sometimes 
black ; pronotum much raised posteriorly and very convex, 
deeply and largely punctured, base rounded; scutellum 
transversely rugose; elytra very finely and closely punc- 
tured, its sides rounded, corium above the inner angle of 
the cuneus sometimes with a dark spot, cuneus entirely 
green, membrane dusky, with darker spots ; tibize with black 
spines, not rising from black spots, femora rarely ringed. 
L. 5-5) mm. 
On Spireaand other plants; not rare. Hastings, Rei- 
gate, Southwold; Norfolk, Edwards; Bexhill, Barnet, 
Shalford, Butler ; Barnstaple, Marshall ; Bickleigh, Horra- 
bridge, Devon, Bignell ; Tatt’s Well, South Wales, Billups ; 
Achilty and Colvend, F. B. White. Var. nigro-nasutus has 
occurred at Corton, near Lowestoft, Butler. 
L. Spinole, Mey.— Very like lucorwm, but rather. 
