138 Christmas Island. 



/ 



^ Family ISSIDJE. 

 C> 10. Issus (?) andrewsi, sp.n. (PI. XY, Fig. 15.) 



Long. Corp. cum tegm. 6 mm. ; long. tegm. 5 mm. ; lat. tegm. 

 2"5 mm. 



Testaceous, front black, tricarinate in the middle, the lateral 

 carinje meeting above in an acute angle ; the sides are dotted with 

 testaceous, and the summit of the angle is of the same colour. 

 There are also outer carinas, raised at the summit within the eyes ; 

 vertex and loAver mouth-parts testaceous. Legs testaceous, the 

 femora and tibice more or less black in the middle. Tegmina 

 coriaceous, greenish grey, a little mottled with brown or reddish 

 brown, especially on the clavus and along the borders, wings 

 brownish hyaline. 



One specimen, without special locality. Allied to some unnamed 

 Indian species in the collection of the Museum. 



o 



Family JASSID^. 

 11. Idiocerus (?) punctatus, sp.n. (PI. XV, Fig. 16.) 



Long. corp. cum tegm. 5 mm. ; long. tegm. 3"5 mm. 



Almost uniform testaceous, darkest on the thorax, which is 

 sculptured with transverse striae. The front of the thorax is some- 

 times speckled with brown, and the hinder part and base of the 

 scutellum are marked with four rather indistinct brownish bands. 

 Ocelli in the middle of the front, about twice as far apart as each 

 is distant from the margin of the eye. Tegmina with longitudinal 

 rows of brown setiferous punctures, and with a brown spot on the 

 inner margin towards the end of the vein of the clavus. Hind 

 tibiee long, whitish, strongly ciliated. 



Five specimens: from East Coast, August, 1897; Flying Fish 

 Cove, October, 1897 ; frad jSTorth Coast, January, 1898. 



Somewhat VGnexablQ^jBythoscoptis testaceus, Wlk., from Sarawak^ 

 but much smaller, paler, and with the ocelli much further from the 

 eyes. It is still nearer'^, unicolor, Wlk., from Makian (Celebes); 

 but the latter species has a brown spot at the end of the tegmina, 

 and the front is less rounded above. 



Order 7.— MALLOPHAGA. 



By W. F. KiEBT, F.L.S., F.E.S., etc. 



A SINGLE specimen (East Coast, September, 1897), probably from 

 some marine bird, but closely resembling, except in its much 

 greater size, Nirmus atte7iuatus, Nitsch, as figured by Giebel 

 (^Insecta Epizoa, Tab. vi, fig. 1). The latter species is found on 

 the corncrake. 



