122 Mr. W. L. Distant on some Coreide. 
Anoplocnemis Westwoodt. 
Myctis annulicornis, Westw. in Hope, Cat. ii. p. 13 (1842) (nom. 
preeoce.). 
Anoplocnemis annulicornis, Stal, En. Hem. iii. p. 49. n. 27 (1873). 
The specific name ‘ annulicornis” was used by Germar 
in 1837 for his Cerbus annulicornis, which belongs to the 
genus Anoplocnemis. I have therefore renamed Westwood’s 
species as above. It is closely allied to Germar’s species, but 
differs by the different colour of the antenne. Specimens 
are contained in the South-African Museum and in my own 
collection which were taken at Cape Town and other parts of 
the Cape Colony. 
Anoplocnemis Montandont, sp. n. 
Head, pronotum, and scutellum piceous, corium very dark 
castaneous, all thickly and ochraceously pilose ; a short fascia 
at base of lateral margin to corium and a broad central fascia 
to scutellum ochraceous; membrane cupreous; abdomen 
above black, with two central ochraceous spots beyond middle 
and the segmental margins also paler; body beneath with the 
head, sternum, and legs piceous, the abdomen and tarsi casta- 
neous, all thickly and ochraceously pilose ; a castaneous spot 
between the intermediate and posterior coxe ; antenne casta- 
neous, the apical joint ochraceous. 
Long., ¢ 21-24, ? 23 millim. 
Hab. Kast Africa, Mpwapwa (Coll. Dist.) ; Mozambique, 
Kikatla (Coll. Montandon). 
Allied to A. scutellaris, Dall., but separated by the different 
colour of the upper surface of the abdomen, the tarsi, and the 
apical joint of the antenne, the absence of the pale lateral 
fascia on each side of the body beneath, and by the length of 
the apical joint of the antenne, which is considerably longer 
than the second joint, and not only slightly longer, as in 
A. scutellaris. 
Dalader parvulus, sp. n. 
Fuscous ; antenne and femora black ; tibiee, tarsi, and body 
beneath mottled with testaceous; a central narrow longitu- 
dinal line to pronotum and the apex of the scutellum pale 
brownish. 
Long., ¢ 20; lat. pronot. angl. 8 millim. 
Hab. Burma, Ruby Mines. 
Allied to D. planiventris, Westw., but differing by its 
smaller size, darker colour, the apical joint of the antenne 
