446 ^ 



r. iiu mac Hiatus, sp. nov. 



Piceous, immaculate. Carinae on h'ea<l, pronotwm, etc., and 

 veins (mostly) dark castaneous. Pleura, abdomen and posterior 

 femora sanguineous; rest of legs ol)scurely marked with pale 

 brown. 



Lateral angles of frons much more produced than in Stal's 

 figure of D. abbreviata. 



Length: 5^^ mill. 



Hab: Queensland, Brisbane (vi). 



2. abbreviata (Guerin). 



Eiirybrachys abbrciiata Guerhi, 1838, \'o)-. Co([uille, 190. 



E. facta White, Evre's Expd. Austral. Appendix, 433, PI. 4, 



f. 3- 



E. nitii'oitns Stal., 1858, O. \'. A. F.. 191. (Figured in Euge- 

 nie's Resa. Ins., PI. IV. f. 7.) 



Hab: Xew South Wales, Sydney (ii). 



The curious nymph is figured on PI. XXIX fig. 5. 



The following species have also -been described: 



3. Eurybrachys btifo Walker, 185 1, List. Hom., 393. 



4. Dardus afbouiacitlatiis Distant, 1892 Trans. Ent. Soc. Lon- 

 don 282. 



5. D. obscitnis Distant, op. c. 283. 



Euroiiotobrachys, gen. nov. 



Allied to Oloiiia Stal. Somewhat of the form of Nicichts Stal, 

 Ijut the tegmina and wings are shorter and the clavus is apically 

 acuminate and closed, the wings are also broader basally. An- 

 tennae short. Scutellum with three carinae. Anterior tibiae 

 with three spines. Type E. arcuata. 



The two species are separa'ble thus: 



1. Vertex a little more than twice as long as wide; 

 Length: 8 mill i arcuata sp. nov. 



2. Vertex more than three times as lon'g as wide; 



Length : to4 mill 2 plana sp. nov 



I. arcuata, sp. nov. 



Pale yellowish ferruginous, marked with blackish 1)r(3wn, the 

 frons freckled witli dirtv brown. Sterna and abdomen sangu- 



