114 JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY AND ZOOLOGY 



Cimatlan Dist. I would also add that it seems to me necessary to 

 separate Camptobrochis, Deraocoris, and their allies, in a distinct 

 division, Deraocoraria, of the tribe Capsini. This division may 

 be distinguished by having the arolia short and united with the base 

 of the claws or at times nearly or quite wanting, and usually there are 

 two approximate, straight, parallel setae between the bases of the 

 claws which might be mistaken for arolia. I am unable to find that 

 Renter has mentioned the form of the arolia in any of these genera 

 but on the contrary has seemed to consider the free divergent arolia 

 as characteristic of the Capsini. The species in this division have a 

 polished, usually convex body, strongly punctured above, with a 

 small head and a decided tendency to an uniareolate membrane and 

 convex and ecarinate xyphus, thus leading to the Bryocorinas with 

 which they are almost certainly related. 



Diplozona coUaris n. sp. 



Aspect of Camptobrochis nebulosus Uhl. Testaceous varied with 

 piceous-brown. Length 4 mm. 



Vertex nearly quadrate; pale with a broad median fuscous cloud 

 Including a short pale line above the base of the clypeus; eyes black. 

 Basal joint of the antennae piceous ; second pale with the clavate apex 

 rufous and the extreme base fuscous; third and fourth piceous. 

 Pronotum largely fuscous, the posterior submargin and humeral 

 angles pale, the carinate edges whitish; three pale spots on the disk, 

 more or less confluent, and a transverse anterior band covering the 

 callosities pale tinged with fulvous. Exterior angles of the scutel- 

 lum and a short median line posteriorly pale. Clavus and disk of 

 the corium posteriorly infuscated; embolium hyaline and impunctate, 

 with a rufous spot at its apex; apex of the cuneus fuscous; punctures 

 of the whole upper surface fuscous. Membrane with a faint longi- 

 tudinal cloud on either side toward the apex, the nervures heavy and 

 piceous. Beneath pale, the propleurae and sides of the venter dark 

 or piceous; the tibiae broadly biannulate with fuscous, at least on the 

 hind pair. 



Described from one pair taken at Punta Gorda, Fla., November 

 13, 1911, and received from Mr. H. G. Barber, and two females 

 taken by me at Estero, Fla., In May, 1908. 



