BARBADOS-ANTIGUA REPORTS 43 
Description—Male, (female unknown); head about as long as deep, 
vertical, the mouth inferior; vertex rostrate, of moderate length, the width 
scarcely one-half that of the basal segment of the antennz, the dorsal 
margins parallel, the anterior margins diverging downwards; eyes promi- 
nent, narrowing ventrally; ocelli small and obscure; antenne long and 
slender; palpi with the last three segments subequal in length, each being 
about as long as the combined lengths of the basal two, the apical one 
gradually expanding from the narrow basal portion to the broad apex, 
where it is about as broad as the length of that segment, the tip oval in 
section and deeply excavate. 
Pronotum about as long as the posterior width, a little longer than the 
head and noticeably broadening posteriorly, the disk subsinuate posteriorly 
and broadly and shallowly concave anteriorly, rounding without distinct 
lateral carine into the lateral lobes, which are fully three times as long 
as high, with both lower angles rounded, the anterior ones the more so. 
Tegmina fully developed, almost attaining to the tips of the posterior 
femora, and with a well developed tympanum; strigulatory vein but 
moderately heavy, mesially bent at rightangle; speculum opaque, fully twice 
as long as wide; wings exceeding the tegmina and surpassing the tips of 
the hind femora. 
Abdomen of moderate size, the subgenital plate elongate, triangular, the 
ventral surface convex; cerci basally heavy and broad, thence tapering 
to an apically slender tip projecting well beyond the tip of the subgenital 
plate. 
Legs stout; anterior and intermediate femora wholly unarmed, the pos- 
terior ones armed on the ventro-external margin only with a number of 
very small triangular teeth, five or six towards the apex the largest; 
anterior tibiz with large open foramina on both faces, that on the outer 
face somewhat the narrower. The dorsal and ventral surface of the fore 
tibiz are rounded and unarmed except for a short apical spine on each 
ventral margin; posterior tibie ventrally carinate mesially and finely and 
bluntly serrate, dorsally flat, gently broadened apically and both carine 
armed with seven or eight stout spurs, those of the inner margin much 
longer and extending further towards the base of the tibe; between the 
large spurs of the outer margin there are a few small teeth, usually one 
between each two spurs, none on the inner carina except two or three 
very small ones towards the base; apical calears of the posterior tibie 
three in number on each side, short, the outer ones much shorter than the 
tibial depths, the middle one the longer, the others very short; the inner 
ventral calear about the same length as the corresponding outer one, but 
the upper and median ones are much longer than the corresponding outer 
ones, the median one being about one-half as long as the posterior meta- 
tarsus and almost as long as the tibial depth and the upper inner ecalear 
noticeably longer than the median one, being slightly longer than the tibial 
depths; posterior metatarsus about twice as long as broad, apically slightly 
swollen and rounded above and below, above armed with two long stout 
apical spines directed upwards and backwards and with a pair of lateral 
