Li) 
70 Mr. EY Saunders’ Synopsis of 
spotted on thighs with red. Antenne brown or red, with 
the basal joint in the @ often black. 
Length 34 lines. 
Very common by sweeping, &e. 
9. infusus, H.-Seff. Fig. H.-Sceff. Wanz. Ins. iv. fig. 
381. 
Yellow or orange-yellow; glabrous, very variable in 
colour ; sometimes almost unicolorous : ; at others, with the 
posterior margin of the thorax, the scutellum, and a wide 
band across the apex of the corium, black; legs and 
antennz red; between these extreme colourations there is 
nearly every g eradation, the posterior band often appearing 
only as a spot in the centre of the apical margin of the 
corium. 
Length 34 lines. 
Not common ; ; on oaks; Lewisham, Chobham, and 
Gomshall, Surrey. 
10. chenopodit, Fall. Fig. Faun. Germ. 93, 21. 
Dull green or grey ish-green, often with two small round 
spots on the posterior “portion of the thorax; a wide 
central line on the scutellum, the clavus and a large 
triangular spot on the corium, widest posteriorly, brown ; 
internal angle of cuneus also ‘of the same colour. Head 
and thorax. shining, punctured. Llytra dull, covered 
with fine golden hairs. Legs more or less brown. Thighs 
spotted. Antennz brown. 
Length 4 lines. 
Common on Ononis, &c., in summer. 
Easily distinguished from our other green species by 
the thick third and fourth joints of the antenne. 
11. alpestris, Mey. Fig. Ent. Month. Mag. vol. iv. 
pl. 1. fig. 3. 
Elongate green, clothed with fine black hairs. Tarsi . 
and antenne, except the basal joint, brown. Head, front 
of thorax and scutellum paler. 
Length 5 lines. 
Burton-on-Trent and Gibside. 
Longer and narrower than its allies, and distinguishable 
by the ‘Jong apical joint to the antenne. 
12. bipunctatus, Fab. 
Green or brownish-green, clothed with short black 
hairs, and with occasional paler ones; thorax finely 
