Rhynchota from New Caledonia. 151 



Nysius caledonice, sp. n. 



Head, pronotum, and scutellum ochraceous, somewhat 

 thickly darkly punctate; eyes and an elongate spot near their 

 inner margins, a narrow transverse fascia near anterior margin 

 of pronotum, basal margin, a central longitudinal line and 

 basal angles to same, basal margin, and a central longitudinal 

 line to scutellum black ; antennae ochraceous, first and fourth 

 joints and extreme apices of second and third joints distinctly 

 darker, sometimes blackish in hue ; corium dull pale ochra- 

 ceous, membrane greyish white ; body beneath and legs dull 

 ochraceous, femora blackly punctate, apices of tarsal joints 

 black ; second and fourth joints of antennae longest and sub- 

 equal in length, basal joint shortest and with the fourth joint 

 stoutest; basal area of abdomen beneath and large macula- 

 tions to sternum black ; rostrum about reaching posterior 

 coxae ; three small linear black spots on apical margin of 

 corium. 



Long. 4-4^ mm. 



Hob. Central District; Gonde*. 



Allied to N. delectus, Buch. White, from the Sandwich 

 Islands. 



Sub f am. Blissin&. . 

 Genus Maceopes, Motsch. 

 Macropes montaguei, sp. n. 



Head and pronotum black, apex of the first and basal third 

 of the second pale testaceous, scutellum testaceous ; corium 

 stramineous ; membrane greyish, the veins blackish ; head 

 and sternum beneath blackish, abdomen and legs sanguineous ; 

 central lobe of head distinctly projecting ; antennae with the 

 fourth and second joints longest, hist joint not quite reaching 

 apex of head ; corium and membrane short, the latter only 

 just passing the base of the fourth abdominal segment ; ante- 

 rior and intermediate femora distinctly incrassated, the first 

 spinous beneath. 



Long. 6^-7 mm. 



Hab. Plaine des Lacs. 



Subfam. Qeocorinm. 

 Genus Neocypus, Dist. 

 Neocypus variegatus. 



Ocypus variegatus, Montr. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (4) iii. p. 68 (1861). 

 Hab. Mt. St. Arago ; Mt. Ignambi. 



