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FLORIDA BUGGIST 
Official Organ of The Florida Entomological Society, Gainesville, 
Florida. 
EROR E.  WANCONS Se ee ne eee _Editor 
PROFS WAL MON JNE WB eels oer eras eee oe Associate Editor 
DRS Eo VW GBR RGER:- sibe net: lee idieas Leone kare yO i Business Manager 
Issued once every three months. Free to all members of the 
Society. 
Subscription price to non-members is $1.00 per year in ad- 
vance; 25 cents per copy. 
AN UNDESCRIBED TELEONEMIA FROM FLORIDA AND 
JAMAICA (HEMIP.)* 
By CARL J. DRAKE 
Since the publication of ‘The North American Species of 
Teleonemia Occurring North of Mexico” (Ohio Journal of Sci- 
ence, Vol. XVIII, pp. 328-332, 1918) the writer has received 
through the kindness of several workers many specimens of 
Teleonemia from North America and the West Indies. The new 
species described herein is the same form as listed by Van Duzee 
in “Notes on Jamaican Hemiptera” (Bulletin of the Buffalo 
Society of Natural Science, Vol. VIII, pp. 3-77, 1908) under the 
name Teleonemia scrupulosa Stal. The insect is named in the 
honor of Prof. E. P. Van Duzee. 
Teleonemia vanduzeei new species. 
Antennae moderately long, slender, sparsely pilose; first segment a 
little stouter than and subequal in length to the second; third segment 
moderately long, slender, about three times as long as the fourth; fourth 
segment subequal in length to the first and second conjoined. Head armed 
with five moderately long, porrect spines, the spines arranged as in related 
species. Length, 3.15 mm.; width, 1.2 mm. 
Pale testaceous or light brownish testaceous, with dark brown markings. 
Pronotum brown, slightly tinged with ferrugineous, tricarinate, lateral 
carinae slightly diverging posteriorly; paranota distinctly uniserate, not 
quite reflected back against the pronotum proper; carinae rather thin, all 
strongly raised and with a single row of rather large areolae, the median 
carinae raised anteriorly and projecting subangularly over the base of head. 
Elytra constricted a little beyond the middle, with dark brown to nearly black 
markings in discoidal and sutural areas; costal and subcostal areas unise- 
riate, the areolae rather large; sutural area with the color marking tending 
to form a transverse band a little before the apex; discoidal area bounded 
_  *Contributions from the Department of Entomology, The New York State 
College of Forestry, Syracuse, N. Y. 
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