170 APPENDIX. BEDUVIID.T. 



each posterior angle ; scutellum obliquely and transversely pilose, 

 its apex pale ochraceous ; corium shorter than greatest length of 

 membrane, longly pilose, a somewhat rounded black spot at inner 

 angle, and a larger spot of the same colour at apical angle (the 

 apical spots are inconstant in size in the same specimen, as may be 



Fig. 92. Ptilocems montandoni. 



seen in the figure, supra), before these spots the inner margin of the 

 corium is distinctly pale greyish ; membrane fuscous brown with 

 small ochraceous spots ; body beneath pitchy brown, lateral 

 margins of the sternum more or less greyish ; legs setose, the 

 posterior tibia? very longly and densely setose. 



Length to apex of hemelytra, 5 millira. 



Hab. Ceylon ; Kandy (Green). 



I have named this species after Dr. A. L. Montandon, who is 

 now our greatest authority on this subfamily. 



Genus HOLOPTILUS. (Vol. II, p. 199.) 

 2942. Holoptilus flavns, Montand. Ann. Mus. Hung, v, p. 423 (1907). 



" Brownish yellow, very bright, fairly uniform, scarcely darker 

 on the under surface of the abdomen ; the hairs and the membrane 

 paler, the latter whitish, a little darkened about the base at the 

 internal edge, with a subtriangular, moderately dark brown spot 

 behind the disk of the corium and three or four small spots of the 

 same colour along the external border of the membrane. Head 

 subquadrangular with the eyes very small, situate a little before 

 the middle of the lateral edges, without apparent tubercle on 

 the vertex, ornamented with fairly long pale somewhat sparce 

 hairs directed forwardly ; on each edge behind the eyes four more 

 rigid hairs directed laterally and fan-like. Pronotum scarcely 

 longer than the head, fairly contracted in front, the lateral 

 margins sinuate behind the anterior third level with a transverse 

 depression which traverses the breadth of the pronotum, almost 

 forming a collar at the anterior area of the pronotum, glossy on the 

 edges, with the anterior angles nearly straight, slightly rounded 



