OF INSULINDE. 13 
straight, clubbed at the apex, which bears short black spines 
at its underside. The fourth tergit has a very slight elevation 
in the middle. Third, fourth and fifth segment equal in 
length, the sixth nearly three times longer than the fifth, 
the seventh and eighth three times longer than the sixth, 
and the ninth (fig. 7) longly pedunculate, the peduncle 
as long as the rest and the forceps together. Forceps strongly 
curved, with crossed tips. Genitalvalve (fig. 8) narrow and 
slender, with pointed tip. 
Body + 32 mm., forewing 14 mm., hindw. 12 mm. 
Abd. o 28 mm., gr. br. 3 mm, gr. br. 2'/, mm. 
Habitat: Java. 
One male, only indicated Java and collected by 8. Müller. 
A doubtfull species is still: 
Panorpa charpentieri Burmeister. 
Handb. Entomol. II, p. 958 (1839). 
In the Leyden Museum is a female of a Panorpa from 
Java, named by Dr. S. C. Snellen van Vollenhoven 
P. charpentieri, which agrees very well with Burmeister’s 
description; but as I have not seen the types, the description 
being very short and the locality the very general indication 
»Ost-Indien”’, so I doubt it is the real charpentieri. 
There are in the Leyden Museum also fragments of another 
undescribed species from Java collected by S. Müller. No 
doubt the number of species, known from Insulinde, will 
considerably increase in future, 
PART II. 
PLANIPENNIA. 
(With 4 plates and 14 text-figures), 
Though as widely distributed as the Mecoprera, this order 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XXXI. 
