1894.] HEMIPTEBA-HETEEOPTEBA OF GEENADA. 221 



Specimens of both sexes were taken on the Mount Gay estate, 

 between September 21 and 26, on the surface of water. 



6. MiCROTELiA, sp. ? 



A small insect, numbered 112 and 122, belonging to this genus 

 was found on stagnant water at Beaulieu and ^V^obul■n ; but the 

 specimens are possibly nymphs and too undeveloped for specific 

 definition. 



Hebeits, Curtis. 



1. Hebrtjs cojfciNNUs, sp. nov. 



Form of H. pusilliis. Fallen. Fuscous or rust-brown above, 

 minutely pubescent, \^dth the disk of pronotum moderately flat 

 and the collum well defined and fulvous. Head nearly as long as 

 the pronotum, dark brown, minutely scabrous, tinged with rufous 

 at tip ; antennae dusky testaceous, sometimes fuscous on the tips 

 of the two basal joints, the first of these a little longer than the 

 second, generally paler at base, the three following ones very 

 slender, set with erect pubescence, the third longer than either of 

 the following ones, the fourth and fifth subequal ; underside of 

 head and the bucculte testaceous; the rostrum pale testaceous, 

 reaching to the posterior coxae. Pronotum with a depressed, 

 curved, rufous margin extending a little over the base of the scu- 

 tellum ; the lateral margins notched behind the swollen anterior 

 lobe ; the humeral angles prominent, rounded, -with a callous long 

 submargin ; the middle line impressed, and each side of it with a 

 few coarse punctures anteriorly and with a group of less coarse 

 ones posteriorly ; the reflexod lateral margin and underside of 

 collum rufous. Scutellum dull fuscous, rough and uneven ; legs 

 testaceous, a Little dusky on the knees, tibiae, and tarsi. Hemelytra 

 scarcely longer than the abdomen, obscurely sericeous pubescent, 

 pale smoke-brown at base, fuscous at tip, with a stripe of white 

 running out from the base of the clavus, and a longer pale streak 

 on the subcostal long areole ; the membrane pale fuscous, with a 

 pale spot each side next the cuneus ; the margin of the entire 

 wing-coverts, including the membrane, also pale next the tip ; 

 there is in some specimens a faint trace of another spot. Venter 

 polished, fuscous black, minutely sericeous pubescent, with a 

 slender black stripe along the middle. 



Length to tip of venter 2|-2| mm. ; width of pronotum 

 1 mm. 



Three specimens of this insect were captured on the Mount 

 Gray estate and Balthazar in June and August. During the latter 

 month they occurred at the roots of grass, on muddy ground near 

 pools of water. This species is a common one which has been 

 met with in the Atlantic States and the West Indies, and it also 

 occurs in California and Washington State. In Maryland it lives 

 on the damp sand or mud of small pools beside streams of water, in 

 spring and late summer. The unwinged individuals may be found 



