270 



HOMOPTERA 



cells; tip rounded; apical limbus iiarrow. Legs robust; hind trochanters armed with teeth; femora 

 cylindrical; tibiae tiiquerate; hind tarsi longest. 



Type typus Funkhouser. 



Geographical distpibution : Centrotoscelus was originall}' described from the Phihppine Islands 

 but has since been reported from the Oriental and Malayan regions. 



1. borneensis Funkhouser, J. R. A. S. 82 : 2i5. 28 (1920). 



2. brevispinns Funkhouser, J. R. A. S. 82 : 216. 29 (1920). 



hreviconiis (error) Goding, OldWorld Memb. 409 (ig^-l). 



3. brunneiis Funkhouser, Phil. Journ. Sci. XXXIII : 117 (1927). 



4. concavus Funkhouser, Notes Phil. Memb. 3i (1918). 



Borneo, Sandakan. 

 Borneo, Sandakan. 



5. flava Kato, Insect World XXXII : 20 (1928). 



6. gracilis Kato, Insect World XXXII : 27 (1928). 



7. handshini Funkhouser, Rev. Suisse de Zool. XLIIl : 7. 196 (1936). 



8. luteus Funkhouser, Notes Phil. Memb. 3o (1918). 



PhiUppines, Luzon. 

 Philippines, Luzon, Benguet, 



Nueva Vizcaya, Imugan, 



Sumatra, Borneo, 

 Formosa. 

 Formosa. 

 Flores. 

 Philippines, Benguet, Baguio. 



9. maculipennis Funkhouser, Journ. F. M.S. Mus. XV^II : 3. 379 (1934). Malaya. 



10. marginata Kato, Insect World XXXII : 29 (1928). Formosa. 



11. matsumurai Kato, Insect World XXXII : 3o (1928). 1'ormosa. 



variegalus (preoccupied) Matsumura, Cic. Jap. II : 21 I1912J. 

 kofhueiisis (preoccupied) Matsumura. Cic. Jap. II : 19 (1912). 



12. mfl»/3?;a Kato, Zool. Soc. Jap. 3oo (igSo). Formosa. 

 i3. «/^ra Kato, InsectWorld XXXII : 27 (1928). Formosa. 

 14. nigrifroiis Kato, Insect World XXXII : 29 (1928). F^ormosa. 

 i5. niiida Kato. Insect World XXXII: 28 (1928). F^ormosa. 



16. (y/;« Funkhouser,Journ.Ent.andZool. VI: 73. 16(1914). — PI.I3, Philippines, Luzon, Los 

 fig. 233. Banos. 



264. Genus KOMBAZANA Distant 



Kombazana Distant, Ins. Trans. 217 (1908). 



Characters : The absence of suprahumerals and the arched posterior process vvhich bends down 

 to impinge on the tegmina at the posterior end are the chief characters for indentification of this genus. 

 Head subquadrate, wider than long, roughh- sculptured; base arcuate and sinuate; eyes globular; ocelli 

 prominent, equidistant from each other and from the eyes and situated well above a line drawn through 

 centers of eyes ; inferior margins of genae sloping and sinuate; clypeus long, narrow, extending for half 

 its length below inferior margins of gente, tip pointed. Pronotum gibbous, no suprahumerals, weak 

 humeral angles, posterior process arched at base; metopidium sloping, wider than high; median carina 

 faintl}^ percurrent; no suprahumeral horns; humeral angles very small and weak; posterior process tliick, 

 heavy and arched above the scutellum, then bending downward and impinging on the tegmina, tip sharp 

 and reaching a little beyond the internal angles of the tegmina; scutellum entireh' exposed, subtriangular, 

 longer than wide, tip notched. Tegmina hyaline, base broadly coriaceous and punctate; veins strong; 

 four apical and three discoidal cells; tip rounded; apical limbus well developed. Legs robust; tibitu 

 somewhat flattened ; hind tarsi longest. 



