26S Mr. W. L. Distant on Homoptera. 



GazumAj gen. nov. 



? . Body elongate, robust ; head (including eyes) sliglitly 

 narrower than base of mesonotura, about as long as space 

 between eyes, front moderately produced, a little broader than 

 long, margins of front and vertex discontinuous, vertex longi- 

 tudinally sulcate ; pronotum about as long as head, lateral 

 margins obliquely sinuate, posterior angles moderately 

 am|)liate; mesonotum (including cruciform elevation) about 

 as long as head and pronotum together; abdomen much 

 longer than space bet\yeen apex of head and base of cruciform 

 elevation ; tympana entirely exposed ; rostrum passing the 

 anterior coxffi; tegraina and wings hyaline; tegmina siiort, 

 broad, only about two thirds the length of body, apical areas 

 short, eight in number, in some specimens less ; wings with 

 live, in some specimens only four, apical areas. 



This description is founded on a series of female specimens. 



Type, G. Barretke, Dist. 



Oazuma Barrettre, sp. n. 



?. Body and legs ochraceous, concolorous; tegmina and 

 wings hyaline, the venation ochraceous ; tegmina with a 

 slight ochraceous tint, the costal membrane ochraceous; third 

 ulnar area very much shorter than fourth ; anterior femora 

 armed with three strong spines beneath. 



Long., excl. tegm., ? 10-12 mm. ; exp. tegra. 19-20 mm. 



Ilab. South Africa : Annshaw {Miss F. Barrett, Brit. 

 Mus.). 



Gazuma Delalandei, sp. n. 



Uniformly brownish ochraceous ; tegmina and wings 

 hyaline, the first a little tinted with very pale brownish, the 

 venation and costal membrane brownish ochraceous; wings 

 with the venation dull ochraceous. 



Allied to G. Barrettce by venation of tegmina, which are, 

 however, a little shorter, front of head a little more prominent; 

 pronotum deeply, centrally, longitudinally sulcate. 



Long., excl. tegm., ? 13 mm.; exp. tegm. 19 mm. 



Ilab. S. Africa {JJelalande, Paris Mus.). 



Gazuma pretoriw, sp. n. 



Closely allied to G. Barrettce in general appearance, but 

 virescent, not ochraceous, and differing structurally from 

 that species by the length of the third ulnar area, which is 



