Vol. XXvii] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. l6l 



tal plate very large and strongly produced, in general form scoop- 

 shaped; distal margin strongly convex latero-proximad, then nearly 

 straight for a decidedly greater distance to broadly convex apex. 



Measurements (in niillinieters). 



Length of Length of Width of Length of Width of 



^ ^ body pronotum pronotuni tegnien tegmen 



TYPE 8.3 2.4 3.3 10.7 3.1 



Paratypes (5) 8.-9.3 2-3-2-4 3-2-3-3 10.-10.3 2.8-3. 



Lincoln, Nebr 9.4 2.7 3.7 11. 4 3.4 



Allotype 8.5 2.6 3.4 102 3. 



Paratypes (5) 9.5-J0.8 2.7-2.8 3-4-3-6 9-8-10.3 3. 



S. S. Tenadores (2) 10.10.2 2.9 3.7-3-8 i:.i-ii.3 3.4 



The Specimens taken away from their native habitat were 

 almost certainly from the east coast of Central America, those 

 from the S. S. Tenadores were taken on at either Bocas del 

 Toro, Panama, or Limon, Costa Rica. The measurements 

 would indicate that the species on the Isla de Cocos averages 

 somewhat smaller than material from the mainland. 



Coloration: General color warm bufif-*, lateral margins of 

 pronotum and all of the tegmina clear translucent warm buff; 

 disk of pronotum antimony yellow, with a few slightly darker 

 (buckthorn brown) markings and very few much darker 

 (mummy brown) minute dots. Wings hyaline with a very 

 slight iridescence, veins and distal cross-veinlets translucent 

 very pale brown. Head warm buff with a very slightly darker 

 diffused broad brown band ventrad between the eyes, a similar 

 but much narrower band between the ocellar spots and on the 

 face traces of two interrupted very narrow bands of the same 

 shade. Abdomen buckthorn brown, ventrad with a large dif- 

 fused dark brown marking proximad and with a dark brown 

 dot laterad on each segment. Antennae and limbs warm buff. 



Specimens Examined: 15; 7 males, 8 females. 



Isla de Cocos, Costa Rica, January, 1902 (P. Biolley), 6 $ , 

 6 ? , TYPE, allotype, paratypes, [A. N. S. P. and Hebard Cln.] 



Material adventive in United States.^ 

 Lincoln, Nebraska, July 15 (introduced in bananas, prob- 

 ably from Central America), i $ [Hebard Cln.]. 



S. S. Tenadores, en route New York, N. Y., to Jamaica, 

 October 19, 191 3 (Hebard; dead in hold), 2 9 [Hebard Cln.] 



* These colors are all taken from Ridgway's Color Nomenclature. 

 5 In these specimens the eyes are slightly wider and the abdominal 

 colors slightly paler than in the typical series. 



