328 Occasional Papers Bernice P. Bishop Museum 
Waianae Valley, Oahu, 2800 feet, VI, 1, 1919, (P. H. Timber- 
lake), 12, [Timberlake Coll.]. 
Lanihuli, Oahu, III, 26, 1916, (P. H. Timberlake), 1 6, [Tim- 
berlake Coll.]. 
Cooke Trail, Oahu, IIL, 10; 1916;.(P5 6 limberlake ey amece 
[Timberlake Coll. ]. 
Mount Konahuanui, Oahu, VI, 6, 1919, (J. A. Kusche), 19; 
| Hebard Coll. ]. 
Mount Tantalus, Oahu, Il, 19, 1916; (RB. oe Limberlake) eae 
19 with ootheca: V, 26, 1910; (J, A. Kusche) pres) pepare 
Coll. ]. 
Mount Olympus; Oahu, VI, 23, 1910, (Ci; AS Kusche} pine, 
| Hebard Coll. ]. 
Kauai, ‘2500 to” 4000 feet, II, 26 to TVS°28 1G 19 3G) 
Kusche), 116, 72, 1 with ootheca, 8 juv., [Hebard Coll.]. 
In the present species the ventro-caudal margin of the cephalic 
femora is armed with one or two, and one distal, spines; the ven- 
tral margins of the other femora with more numerous, rather weak 
spines, those of the caudal margins being slightly the heavier.** 
In specimens of the maximum recessive coloration, the color 
pattern is very weakly indicated. 
EOBLATTA Shelford 
1911. Eoblatta Shelford, Ent. Monthly Mag., (2), XXII, 
peesS. 
“Type of the genus: Blatta notulata Stal.” 
The original hurried diagnosis of this genus, referred to the 
*In two females which, we believe, represent <Allacta conjuncta 
(Walker), from New Zealand, in the Hebard Collection, the limb arma- 
ment is seen to show decidedly greater atrophy, the margins discussed above 
armed only with a single distal spine, except the ventro-caudal margins of 
the median and caudal femora, which are supplied distad with a few addi- 
tional spines. Brunner’s latipennis 1s apparently based on specimens of more 
than one species, the material from New Zealand very possibly representing 
the species described by Walker as conjuncta. 
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