BARBADOS-ANTIGUA REPORTS 23 
subject to great color variation. Owing to Distant’s excellent 
figure of C. vincentti Westw. (Proc. Zool. Soe. Lond., Pl. XXX, 
Fig. 3, 1901) it is possible to pronounce it as one of the many 
color forms of C. side. The artist has, however, made the first 
segment of the antenna a little too short. 
Jadera hematoloma Herrich-Schiffer 
1847. Jadera hematoloma Herrich-Schaffer, Wanz. Ins., VIII, 103, Fig. 
873. 
One brachypterous specimen from Antigua. It has been re- 
ported from Cuba and Jamaica. There is some doubt concern- 
ing the identity of this single, rather badly greased specimen, 
because of its red color. The head, antennex, legs, and abbre- 
viated membrane are black; elsewhere red, probably due to its 
immaturity. 
Family Pyrrhocoride 
Dysdercus discolor Walker 
1872. Dysdercus discolor Walker, Cat. Het., V, 190. 
1881. Dysdercus delauneyi Lethierry, Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., XXV, 10. 
1894. Dysdercus annuliger Uhler, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., V, 189. 
Although this was not taken in either Antigua or Barbados 
the collection contains one specimen from Montserrat, two from 
St. Lucia and two from Grenada. Lethierry in 1881 described 
this as D. delauneyi from Guadeloupe. Uhler in 1894 re- 
described it as D. annuliger from Grenada and also reports it 
from St. Vincent in 1894. Distant (Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 1902) 
states that Uhler’s species is the same as Walker’s. Ballou 
(West Indian Bulletin 1906) reports delauneyi (—annuliger 
Uhler) from Montserrat, Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, 
St. Lucia, Barbados, St. Vincent, Grenada, and the Grenadines. 
I have seen specimens from Dominica in the collection of the 
American Museum of Natural History. 
It is a dark red species subject to some color variation, but 
when fully colored has the vertex of the head, more or less of 
the posterior lobe of the pronotum, and the corium and legs 
fuscous; the antenne are black except at base with a con- 
spicuous pale ring at base of the fourth segment. Often the 
legs and antenne are more or less red. All ventral parts of 
