Length of body 5.50 mm.; length to tip of elytra 11 mm.; elytral 

 expansion 19 mm. 



The writer took a specimen on willow at Marianna, 

 Fla., and at the following localities in Mississippi: Tupelo, 

 July 1, 1921; Jonestown, Sept., 1915, J. L. E. Lauderdale. 

 A specimen was taken by W. B. Cartwright at Knoxville, 

 Tenn., Sept. 29, 1919. 



Swezey (1904 Prel. Cat. of Fulgoridae) lists oak, beech, 

 maple and hickory as food plants. 



Otiocerus stollii KIRBY 

 (1819 Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond., xiii, p. 16) 



Recorded from N. Y., Pa., Ga., Ohio, La., and is also 

 found in Brazil. 



Of the same dark color as in degeerii. 



Reddish, elytra of about the same color of degeerii with large 

 white area on apex. 



Body pale red. Head large and pale; upper carinae straight, poli- 

 nose-snowy, lower carinae very close together; antennae reddish, 

 shorter than head, gradually becoming a little thicker, the base with 

 two reddish appendages shorter than the antennae; eyes brown. 

 Elytra smoky-hyaline with a more or less carmine tinge; a pale 

 rosaceous vitta occupies the vertex, the middle of the thorax, and 

 the elytral suture, as far as the tip of the clavus, beyond which is 

 a pale line that extends to where the dilation of the elytra begins; 

 a large white area at apex; venation reddish. Wings smoky-hyaline, 

 veins reddish, legs pale, without markings. 



Length of body 5 mm.; length to tip of elytra 7 mm.; elytraj 

 expansion 12 mm. 



A specimen beaten from oak near Buffalo, N. Y., by 

 E. P. Van Duzee gives us a clue as to one of its food-plants. 

 Specimens were taken on pecan at Agricultural College, 

 Miss., Aug. 17, 1915, by C. C. Greer; on same host at Ham- 

 burg, Miss., Aug. 22, 1911, by W. E. Dove; and beaten from 

 shrubbery at Trimcane, Miss., April 19, 1921, by the writer. 

 Prof. Herbert Osborn collected a single specimen while 

 beating a coniferous tree, probably Juniperus virginianus, 

 at Biloxi, Jan. 14, 1922. 



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