i3o 



HOMOPTERA 



8. flava Burmeister, Rev. Silb. I : 23 1. ii (i833). 



9. flavovittata Stal, Bid. Memb. Kan. 242. 2 (1869). 



10. formosa Butler, Cist. Ent. II : 214 (1878). 



11. furcata Burmeister, Rev. Silb. I : 23 1. 10 (i8S3). 



12. furcifer Laporte, Ann. Ent. Soc. France I : 23o (i832). 

 i3. fuscata Buckton, Mon. Memb. i65 (1903). 



14. hirta Germar, Rev. Silb. III : 255. 2 (i835). 

 i5. jugalis Buckton, Mon. Memb. i65 (igoS). 



16. nasalis Stal, Rio Jan. Hem. II : 34. 6 (i858). 



furcispina Lethierry, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. VI : i55. 53 (1890). 



17. proxima Guerin, Ic. Reg. Anim. Ins. 365 (i838). 



18. saturalis Berg, Ann. Soc. Cien. Arg. XVI : 285 (i883). 



19. trifida Fabricius, Syst. Ent. IV : 12. 19 (1775). — Pl. 7, fig. 85. 



ornata Laporte, Aiin. Soc. Ent. Fr I : 23o (i832). 



Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela. 

 Colombia, Brazil, Ecuador, 



Peru, Argentina. 

 Mexico. 

 Biazil. 

 Brazil. 

 Brazil, Peru. 



Brazil, Guatemala, Mexico 

 Brazil, Peru. 

 Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, 



British Guiana. 

 Brazil,Peru,Yucatan,Mexico. 

 Argentina. 

 Brazil, Colombia, Bolivia, 



Peru. 



100. genus poppea stal 



Poppea Stal, Bid. Hem. Syst. 55i (1867). 



Characters : Closely related to the preceding genus but the insects average larger in size and 

 differ in having much stronger suprahumeral liorns aiid in lacking the two upright spines at the base 

 of the posterior process. Head subquadrate, tvvice as broad as long, usually smooth and shining; 

 base feebly arcuate; eyes very large, globular and protruding; oceUi conspicuous, about equidistant 

 from each other and from the eyes and situated on a Hne drawn through centers of eyes ; inferior 

 margins of genae sinuate and flanged; clypeus extending for half its length below inferior margins of 

 genae. Pronotum bulbous and spinose; anterior portion convex ; suprahumeral horns sharp and gener- 

 ally more or less conical; metopidium convex, about as wide as high; median carina usually obsolete ; 

 humeral angles well developed, heavy, blunt, triangular; sides of pronotum deeply impressed at lateral 

 margins; posterior process trispinose, the spines long and slender and sometimes swollen at their bases. 

 Tegmina entirely free, corium fuUy exposed; cells large and irregular in shape; veins strong ; five 

 apical and three discoida) cells; median apical cell petiolate; apical Hmbus broad and usually wrinkled. 

 Legs simple; hind tarsi longest. 



Type rectispina Fairmaire. 



Geogpaphical distribution : This is primarily a Central American genus but a few species 

 range northward into Mexico and a few others southward into northern South America. 



i. affinis Fowler, B. C. A. II : 100 (1895). 



2. albiloba Goding. Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc. XXXVII : 2. 172 (1929). 



3. bulbidorsa Godiiig, Amer. Mus. Novit. 17 (igSo). 



4. capricornis Fowler, B. C. A. II : 99. 5 (1895). — Pl. 7, fig. 86. 



5. concititia Fowler, B. C. A. II : 100. 6 (1895). 



6. delicata Plummer, Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. XXIX : 4 (1936). 



7. discrepans Goding, S. .\. Memb. 2^4 (1929). 



8. longicornis Plummer, Memb. Mex. 3^5 (ig^S). 



Guatemala, Costa Rica. 



Costa Rica. 



Peru. 



Panama, Costa Rica. 



Panama. 



Mexico. 



Peru. 



Mexico. 



