LAWSON: KANSAS CICADELLID^. 75 



Color: Green, varjnng to reddish-orange on face, pronotum, and 

 scutellum of female. Male, greenish brown, with dark-brown spots 

 laterally near anterior margin of pronotum and on basal angles of the 

 scutellum. Propleurae with large black spots in both sexes. 



Genitalia: Characteristic of the genus. 



Distribution: Gray and Pottawatomie counties have so far 

 yielded specimens of this species. 



Hosts: Salix fluviatilis seems to be the willow on which it 

 occurs. 



Mao'opsis viridis (Fh.). 



(PI. 5, figs. 7-9.) 

 Pediopsis viridis Fh.. Homop. N. T. St. Cab., p. 59, 1851. 

 Bythoscopus viridis Walk., List Homop., iv, p. 1162, 1852. 

 Pediopsis viridis Uhl., Bui. U. S. Geol. Geog. Surv., iii, p. 467. 1877. 

 Pediopsis viridis Tan. D., Can. Ent., xxi, p. 9, 1889. 

 Pediopsis viridis Osb., Proc. la. Acad. Sci., i, pt. 2, p. 126, 1892. 

 Pediopsis viridis G. & B., Hemip. Colo., p. 73, 1895. 

 Pediopsis viridis O. & B., Proc. Dav. Acad. Sci., vii, p. 121, 1898. 

 Pediopsis viridis Osb., 20th Kept. X. Y. St. Ent., p. 504, 1915. 

 Pediopsis viridis Osb., Me. Agr. Exp. Sta., Bui. 238, p. 89. 1915. 

 Pediopsis viridis DeL. Tenn. St. Bd. Ent., Bui. 17, p. 16, 1916. 

 Macropsis viridis Van D., Cat. Hemip. N. A., p. 582, 1917. 

 Macropsis viridis Lathr.. S. C. Ast. Exp. Sta., Bui. 199, p. 24, 1919. 



Form: Medium sized, smaller than ej^throcephala, larger than gledits- 

 chise. Length, 4.5 to 5.5 mm. Species with vertex and pronotum ob- 

 tusely angled, the latter distinctly striated. 



Color: Female green, with tips of eljiira slightly fuscous; males green, 

 but tinged with fuscous, el>i:ra brownish practically all over. Males with 

 black spot on propleurae, thus differing from gleditschi-ie. 



External genitalia: Characteristic of the genus, with a very strong 

 chitinous band bounding the posterior margin of the pygofers and ex- 

 tending dorsad in a prominent spine, 



Male internal genitalia: Styles very long, with a distinct bend pos- 

 terior to point of attachment with connective, terminal portion broadly 

 curved and with sides about parallel clear to the tip, except for slight 

 bulge about midway; connective large and stout, Y-shaped w^hen viewed 

 dorsally, with base of Y very heavy and with a dorsal terminal process; 

 cedagus with distinct basal portion from which there extends dorsad a 

 strong process and a longer, posteriorly tapering but dorsally curved por- 

 tion. 



Distribution: Taken in Douglas, Pottawatomie and Ottawa 

 counties. 



Hosts: Willow. 



