100 THE UNIVERSITY SCIENCE BULLETIN. 
longation of the head before the eyes is certainly of generic value at 
least. 
Mesovelia mulsanti White 1879. 
Trans. Ent. Soc. London, vol. 17, ser. 3, p. 268. 
“General color yellowish testaceous to green. The gibbous hind lobe 
of the prothorax lead color, marked with a yellow stripe along the middle; 
the outer sides and tip of the scutellum, the veins and cuneus of the 
wing-covers, the eyes, the tylus, the apical joint, points of articulation, 
base, a few marks in the antennae, a large part of the end of the tarsi, and 
the tip of the tibie, are brown. The underside of body clothed with a 
close silvery pile. 
“Antenne are slender, filiform, longer than the abdomen, the basal 
joint is barely a little thicker than the others, of about the same length 
as the third and fourth, the second joint much shorter than the others, 
and the antenniferous tubercles are expanded in front so as to give a 
trumpet-like enlargement to the front of the cranium. From the slightly 
bent clypeus the slender rostrum extends back to the middle coxe, the 
second joint being long and tapering. The prothorax is contracted into 
a short, transverse front lobe, but widened at the shoulders, which are 
tubercle-like and prominent, and the posterior margin is cut almost 
square off; behind this the scutellum is conspicuous, and has a triangular, 
callous elevation on the disc and a smaller one behind it.”—Uhler. 
Distribution: Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, North 
Carolina, Florida, Ohio, Illinois, Kansas and Texas. 
The specimens that have come under the writer’s observation conform 
in a number of other points not mentioned above. The head is large 
before the eyes and bears four black shiny setiferous tubercles, two on 
either side of the median line, some distance in front of, and on a line 
with, the inner margins of the compound eyes. A similar pair lie in the 
back part of the head laterad of the ocelli and on a line with the pos- 
terior margin of the eyes. These are found on both sexes, apterous and 
winged, and upon the nymphs. The adults also have a median longi- 
tudinal groove extending from the clypeo-frontal suture to the caudal 
margin of the head. 
The female abdomen is much wider than that of the male and in 
profile very different (see pl. XIV). 
Champion states that Uhler’s bug checks with White’s description, 
and since there is still some question regarding the species, the original 
description is here appended “in toto.” 
M. mulsanti White. 
“Sordide flavo-testacea, subopaca, plus minus fusco-nebulosa; clypeo, 
ocellis, pronoto marginibus angustissimis foveisque lobi antici et lobo 
postico, scutello marginibus et maculis literam C simulantibus in utroque ~ 
latere disci plage antice sitis, hemelytris venis, tarsis articulo ultimo, 
necnon spinulis pedium plus minus nigro-brunneis; antennis articulis 
1° 2° que ad apicem, 3° 4° que totis, tibiis ad apicem, tarsorum articulo 1° 
et articulo 2 ad apicem fusco-brunneis; hemelytris albidis, corio cellule 
interioris dimidio apicali, clavo margine apicali et margine interiore 
pone medium necnon macula discali fuscis; capite antice albopiloso, 
macula utrinque prope basin antennarum fusca, et macula minore 
utrinque pone illas nogro-brunnea; pronoto lobo postico linea longitudi- 
nali flavo-testacea notato, angulis posticis emarginatis; scutelli plaga 
antica fovea semicirculari utrinque instructa; hemelytrorum membrana 
vena fusco-brunnea subsinuata, ex apice cellulae interioris corii ad 
