APPENDIX. 



Hob. Tenasserim ; Myitta (Doherty). 



Larger than JE. horni, Bredd.; first joint of posterior tarsi 

 distinctly shorter than the second and third joints together; 

 antennae concolorous ; eyes black ; prosternum sanguineous, &c. 



Genus ONCOPELTUS. (Vol. II, p. 4.) 



2771. Oncopeltus rubricatus, st&l (Lygseus oncopeltus), Ofv. Vet.- 

 Ak. Fork. 1870, p. 659 ; id. (Oncopeltus), En. Hem. iv, p. 101 

 (1874) ; Bredd. Deutsch. ent. Zeitschr. 1907, p. 42. 



"Beddish testaceous, remotely fuscously pilose, impunctate; 

 antennae, rostrum, membrane, mesosternum, metasternum, a spot 

 on both the second and third ventral segments, fourth, fifth, and 

 sixth ventral segments, anal appendage and legs black ; membrane 

 with the anterior basal angle and a small transverse spot before 

 middle white ; posterior margins of the mesosternum and meta- 

 sternum, and lateral margins of the afbdomen beneath behind 

 middle, testaceous. 



" Allied to the Ethiopian 0. famelicus, Fabr., but the colour 

 markings distinct ; pronotum with a distinct, obtuse, longitudinal 

 procurrent carination, the posterior angles backwardly distinctly 

 produced, rounded or subangularly rounded ; scutellum distinctly 

 tumid, subdepressed, obtusely carinate." (Stdl.) 



" Length ? 12 ; breadth 4 millim." 



Hob. Ceylon ; Horrowapatam (fide Breddin). Cochin China, 

 Philippines (fide St&l). 



This species must be placed after 0. nigriceps (vol. ii, p. 4), of 

 which Stll stated his species might prove to be a variety. I in- 

 clude it here on the authority of Breddin, and presuming his 

 identification to be correct. It has been contained in none of the 

 large collections made by Mr. Green in Ceylon. 



Genus LYGJEUS. (Vol. II, p. 5.) 



LTG-SUS PANDTJBUS, Scop. (Cimex) Ent. earn. p. 126 (1763); Oshan. 

 Verz. Pal Hem. i (Heteropt.), p. 247 (1906), inch synon. 



Lygaeus militaris, Fabr. (Vol. II, p. 6). 



Prof. Oshanin, in his excellent and indispensable " Verzeichnis 

 der Palaearktischen Hemipteren," has recently used Scopoli's 

 name pandurus (1763) for that of militaris, Fabr. (1775), and 

 therefore according to the strict rules of priority, I follow his 

 direction. 



