Orthopierous Genus Phjllophora. 305 



5. Phyllophora heyica. 



Phyllopliora keyica, Brunn. Abhaadl. senckeub. Ges. xxiv. p. 263 



(1898). 



Hah. Ke. 



There is an immature female specimen in the Natural 

 History Museum from Ke Duian which appears to be refer- 

 able to A. heyica. 



6. Phyllopliora amplifoUa. (PI. VI. fig. 1.) 

 Phyllophora amplifoUa, Walk. Cat. Derm. Salt. iii. p. 431. n. 6 (1870). 



Hah. Tringanj (Malay Peninsula). 



Long. Corp. cum ovip. 70 millim.; exp. tegm. 170 milli:n. ; 

 lat. tegm. 40 millim. 



Female. — Green ; front of head slightly indented in the 

 middle; hood pointed at the extremity; the teeth i-ather 

 large, pointed, and well separated at the base ; front lobe 

 with 4, middle lobe with 2, hinder lobe with the alternate 

 spines distinctly larger than the others, or, behind the lateral 

 spines, frequently 2 short spines, instead of 1 between the 

 longer ones ; central carina only indicated before the middle ; 

 tegmina quite half as broad as long ; costa oblique towards 

 the apex, which is completely rounded off; a number of 

 small scattered white dots, generally surrounded- with darker; 

 nervures greener than the rest of the tegmina, principal 

 nervure with the first of the three terminal branches nearly 

 straight, the two lower ones separating distinctly beyond ; 

 none of the three forked except slightly at their tips, and 

 even the branches of the lowest runnius: to the mar":in 

 distinctly above the apex. 



Front femora with 4 spines on each carina ; middle with 5 

 (not symmetrical) ; hind femora with about 10. 



A very broad-winged species resembling P. spinosa, Brunn., 

 but with very numerous short teeth behind the middle spines, 

 one or two shorter spines being placed between each pair of 

 rather longer ones. 



7. Phyllophora speciosa. 



Phyllophora speciosa^ Thunb. M6m. Acad. Imp. Sci. St. P^tersb. v. 

 p. 286, pi. iii. (1815). 



Hah. ? 



Thunberg has not mentioned the locality of his type, and 

 therefore the name of speciosa has been applied to several 

 different species of Phyllophora. His figures, however, 



