ny 
Capside. 305 
On Gnaphalium germanicum, Woking, 1888. The actual 
locality has been destroyed, and I have looked for it every 
year since within a few yards of where it occurred, but 
without success. 
A. brevicollis, Mied.— g elongate oval, greenish grey ; 
2 oval, ochreous; both sexes clothed with pale hairs. 
Head slightly longer than the pronotum, greenish in the J, 
ochreous in the 9, second joint of the antenne not quite so 
long as the third and fourth together, thickened in the J; 
pronotum in the ¢ greenish grey on the disc, inclining to 
green round the callosities and to ochreous at the sides, in 
the ? ochreous, slightly tinged with green, base about once 
and a half as long as the anterior margin, sides slightly 
sinuate, raised ; elytra with the sides subparallel ¢, or 
rounded ?, ochreous, with a dark greyish shade covering 
the clavus and inner portion of the corium, membrane dusky, 
cells rather darker in mest specimens, nerves pale; femora 
with a few dark spots near the apex. 
L. 4-44 mm. 
By sweeping grass, &c., Woking, Chobham, and probably 
elsewhere, but very likely mixed with affinis, or the ¢ 
possibly mistaken for Onychunenus decolor, which it some- 
what resembles. 
A, affinis, Mieh.—Very like the preceding, but larger, 
ochreous, without decided green tints in either sex, both 
sexes suboval in form, and densely clothed with blackish 
brown hairs, male darker than the female; the pronotum, 
except the dorsal line and lateral margins, and the elytra 
between the nervures, often entirely greyish brown; in the 
? the entire insect is generally ochreous, in the 3 the ab- 
domen is black above. Dr. Reuter gives this character to 
both sexes, but in all my females the abdomen is pale above 
except at the extreme base. 
L. 5 mm. 
By sweeping grass, d&c., generally in dry places, Woking, 
Reigate, Hampton Wick, Tunbridge Wells; Eltham, Douglas 
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