OF INSULINDE, 69 
so that the imago easily forces it. When opening a box, 
such a lid was dislocated from the cocoon of a spinning 
larva, but the larva readily reattached it by spinthreads 
from its pygidium. The cocoons were attached to leaves or 
to the sides of the boxes, Fig. 22. 
but were not made in the 
sand on the bottom. The 
diameter is 4'/, mm. 
The pupa (fig. 22) has a 
pale yellow colour, the eyes 
are brown with a bronzy 
tinge and the tips of the man- 
dibles brown. There are also 
traces of the dark stripes on 
the face. The length is about 
4 mm. In the cocoon there 
were two short cylindrical 
black excrements of the larva. 
On November 3'd and 4th 
the imagines emerged; they 
were pale grass-green, but dis- Chrysopa Eide n. sp. 
coloured after death to yellow. ie 
The total metamorphosis, after hatching, dures about 
28 days. 
Chrysopa ochracea Albarda. 
Chrysopa ochracea Albarda, Midden-Sumatra, IV, prt. 5, 
p. 15 (1881). Sumatra. 
Related to flaveola, but distinct by the pale, not 
marked palpi and antennae; the colour of the body is 
pale ochraceous. 
Antennae nearly as long as the wings. Palpi and head 
ochraceous, eyes blackish brown. Prothorax nearly as broad 
as the head with the eyes. Legs pale ochraceous, the 
claws scarcely darker. 
Wings hyaline, broader and the tips somewhat more 
obtuse than in flaveola. Nervature ochraceous, in some 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XX XI. 
