Capside. 271 
wider and more transverse, and its sides more parallel, and 
the legs are entirely black. 
L. 5 mm, 
Chobham, Woking, Hampton Wick, Lowestoft, Barn- 
staple, Nunton near Salisbury, on Tanacetum, Marshall ; 
Bixley, Norfolk, Edwards ; Hurst Green, butler ; Chertsey, 
Taff’s Well, South Wales, Billups; Glanvilles Wootton, 
Dale; Weybridge, Douglas and Scott; Forres, Pitlochry, 
Norman. 
MACROLOPHUS, Feb. 
Elongate, delicate in texture, head convex, face nearly 
vertical, eyes remote from the pronotum, small, situated 
about midway between the apex and base of the head, sides 
behind the eyes parallel, antennze with the second and third 
joints subequal, rostrum reaching to the posterior coxe; 
pronotum with rather a long parallel-sided collar, sides 
sinuate, base raised and largely emarginate ; elytra parallel- 
sided, membrane fully developed ; femora slender, tibize with 
exceedingly fine spine-like hairs, second joint of the tarsi 
twice as long as the third. 
M. nubilus, 77. Sci.—Green, clothed with fine semi- 
erect brown hairs, basal joint of the antenna, a stripe 
on each side of the head behind the eye, black, extreme 
apex of the corium and the last joint of the tarsi brown, 
antenne reaching toabout the apex of the cuneus, pronotum 
with a strong transverse discal impression, membrane with 
a transverse cloud above the apex. 
L. 33-4 mm. 
Rare; on Stachys sylvatica, Reigate, Tunbridge Wells; 
Battle, Highgate, Barnet, by sweeping, “no Stachys sylvatica 
near,” Butler; St. Albans, Leicester, Marshall; Norfolk, 
Edwards; Cardiff, Billups ; Lewisham, June, on Stachys 
sylvatica, Douglas and Scott ; Pitlochry, Forres, Norman. 
