18 On Cicadidfc/row the North Chin Hills, Burma. 



by Miss Campbell. Calcagninus marginatiis is the third 

 described species of the genus, and, as the other two were 

 received from the Neelgiri Hills, Calcagninus may prove to be 

 a mountain genus. 



Poecilopsaltria Watsoni, sp. u. 



$ . Head, pronotum, and mesonotuni brownish ochraceous; 

 head with a transverse margin to front, a spot above base of 

 antennee, the area of the ocelli, and a transverse fascia con- 

 necting same with eyes black ; pronotum with the incisures 

 and two central fascite directed outwardly towards anterior 

 margin black; mesonotum with four obconical spots on ante- 

 rior margin, the central two shortest ; a lanceolate central 

 discal fascia and a small spot in front of each anterior angle 

 of the basal cruciform elevation black. Abdomen thickly 

 covered with yellowish pile, the segments blackish at base 

 and pale ochraceous at apical margins ; a faint longitudinal 

 central black fascia, broadest at base. Sternum and legs 

 brownish ochraceous; face with a central longitudinal black 

 fascia ; abdomen beneath without the yellowish pile. 



Tegmina talc-like and obscure creamy white, brownish at 

 base, and with three irregular brown transverse fasciai en- 

 closing rounded creamy spots, the first crossing radial area, 

 the second just beyond radial area, and the third at junction 

 of apical and ulnar areas ; a double row of outer marginal 

 spots situate on the longitudinal veins of apical areas. Wings 

 stramineous, the apical margin and a transverse fascia before 

 apex dark castaneous : these castaneous markings enclose a 

 large subapical stramineous spot. 



The rostrum reaches the apex of the second abdominal 

 segment. 



Long. excl. tegm., $ 22 millim. ; exp. tegm. 62 millim. 



Allied to P. hilj^a, Walk. 



Cosmo2)saltria velitaris, sp. n. 



In colour and markings very closely allied to C. nicomache, 

 Walk., but larger, and diftering also trom that species by tlie 

 greater length of the rostrum, which considerably passes the 

 posterior coxse, and not only just extending beyond their apex 

 as in Walker's species ; the abdomen also is longer and the 

 opercula proportionally to same being much shorter. The 

 principal colour difference is in the dorsal surface of the 

 abdomen, which is more castaneous and less black. 



Long. excl. tegm., (J 27 millim. ; exp. tegm. 80 millim. 



