266 LTemiptera-FLeteroptera. 
in the g darker at the extreme base, with a transverse 
shining white band traversing the corium just above the 
posterior cox, bordered with dark brown, and a semi- 
lunate spot on the clavus at its side ; there is another similar 
band just above the cuneus ; cuneus dark brown like the base 
of the elytra, membrane dusky ; inthe ? each elytron has a 
triangular white spot, and the globose abdomen is clothed 
with scattered upright hairs, lees brown, femora and tibia 
with erect hairs. 
L. 4mm. 
Littlehampton, Woking, Chobham ; Weybridge, Douglas. 
Dover, C. G. Hall; Mousehold Heath, Norfolk, Hdwards ; 
Camber Sandhills, Butler; Pluckley, Kent, Billups ; 
Langport, Dale. 
ALLODAPUS, Fie. 
(Hroticoris, D. § 8.) 
Subelongate in the developed form, short and widened 
posteriorly in the undeveloped, eyes large, very prominent, 
vertex with a longitudinal impression, antenne of nearly 
equal thickness throughout; pronotum with a narrow, 
straight collar, sides sinuate, base emarginate; elytra con- 
siderably longer than the abdomen in the macropterous 
form, truncate at the apex, and about two-thirds the length 
of the abdomen in the brachypterous ; legs slender, with the 
femora slightly thickened. 
There is only one species in the genus. 
A. rufescens, H. Scif—Pale brownish red, clothed 
with long erect hairs, elytra with four white spots. 
Antenne with the basal joint pale, red at the base, second 
darker red towards the apex, about equal in length to the 
third and fourth together, fourth about three-quarters as 
long as the third; pronotum more or less transversely 
rugose, base about twice as wide as the anterior margin, 
sides sinuate, base largely emarginate, scutellum with a 
