Rhynchotal family Capsidie Audt. 259 



Hah. PuLO Laut. 



Although this remarkable genus has only 1 distinct 

 membrane cell, it appears to me to belong to the Capsaria. 



Cheilocajjsus, gen. no v. 



Somewhat remotely allied to Hyalo;peplus, Stal, but at 

 once separable by the opaque elytra and differently formed 

 pronotum. 



Vertex feebly margiiiate near the base ; clypeus vertical, promi- 

 nent, extending beyond vertex. Eyes prominent, anterolaterally 

 sinuately emarginate, oblique, together wider than vertex, remote 

 from pronotum. Rostrum extending to intermediate coxae. Pro- 

 notum with a well-marked collar, obsoletely callose behind the 

 latter, lateral margins a little sinuately divergent posteriorly, 

 2f wider at base than at apex, subrugose transversely, posterior 

 margin subrotundately trimcate. Elytra subrugose-punctate, extend- 

 ing beyond apex of abdomen, the larger membranal area angular 

 apically. Cuneus very elongate. 



26. C. flavomarginatus, sp. nov. (Plate VI, fig. 9.) 



Clothed with short, black, bristly hair. Head, pronotum, extreme 

 base of scutellum, legs and ventral surface, dull flavous. Exocorium, 

 cuneus (except black interobasal angle and extreme apex) bright 

 flavous. Antennpe sanguineous, apex of 2nd segment blackish. Eyes, 

 lateral margins (narrowly) of pronotum, scutellum, elytra, mem- 

 branal nervures, etc., black. Membrane cinereohyaline. Posterior 

 femora with 4 small black spots. Dorsum of abdomen sanguineous. 

 Head with a slight longitudinal sulcus. First segment of antennae 

 subincrassate, subequal to pronotum in length, a trifle longer than 

 cuneus, 2nd a little more than twice as long as the 1st, First 

 segment anterior tarsi longer than 2nd and 3rd together. 



Long. 11 mill., lat. pronot. 3^ mill. 



Hah. Burma, Chan Yoma. 



Euryhroch'is, gen. nov. 



Somewhat similar in appearance to Oamptohrochys, 

 Fieber, but vertex entirely marginate. Allied to Lygidca, 

 E-euter, but with longer head, eyes not touching pronotum, 

 eyes (as seen in profile) longer, basally emarginate. 



TRANS. ENT. SOC. LOND. 1902. — PART II. (JUNE) 18 



