140 MR. W. v. KIEBY ON THE 



*tBEixioiDES CARiNATUS. (Plate V. fig. 9.) 



Long. corj). 4 lin. ; esp. tegm. 13^ millim. 



Testaceous ; head and thorax above with broad black markings 

 on each side of the central carina, and sides of thorax with 

 several longitudinal black dashes ; abdomen blackish in the 

 middle and on the sides. Frontal carina and legs nearly white, 

 with numerous transverse black striae. Under surface of body 

 testaceous, with two black lines on the pleura, the lower one 

 macular ; ventral surface of abdomen mostly black in the middle. 

 Tegmina buff, slightly transparent, with 12 or 15 oblique light 

 brown stride on the costa, intersecting the cross nervures, which 

 are nearly straight, and concolorous with the tegmina. The 

 region of the anal angle is infuscated, and the third and fifth of 

 the striae from the tip converge and extend nearly to the anal 

 angle ; the tw"o outermost striae are directed obliquely inwards 

 instead of outwards, but the last curves outwards again to the 

 hinder angle, where it is almost divided into black spots ; aud 

 between it and the extremities of the 3rd and 5th stripes (which 

 are also brown) beyond the costal region are several more black 

 dots. The brown bars towards the base of the tegmina are 

 variable in number, even on opposite sides of the same specimen. 

 On the rest of the tegmina the iiervures are sparingly dotted 

 with, dark brown ; and there are two much larger spots placed 

 obliquely about the middle of the basal third of the tegmina. 

 Wings hyaline, clouded towards the lower part of the hind margin. 



Pundaloya. 



Delphacid^. 



*tDELPHAX Eenesti, sp. u. (Plate V. fig. 14.) 



Long. corp. cum tegm. 4-5 lin. 



Testaceous ; head, face, and thorax strongly tricarinated : 

 egmina subhyaline, with a bi^oad brown bar at one-fourth of 

 their length, running from the costa obliquely forwards to the 

 inner margin ; this is followed by a row of three black dots, the 

 first considerably below the co^sta, and the last resting on the 

 inner margin ; the outer half of the tegmina is clouded, leaving a 

 semilunular vitreous space on the costa, below which the shade 

 is darkest ; round the apex of the wing are eight black dots, two 

 of which stand on the costa, within the clear space, and there is 

 another isolated spot near the inner margin at about half its 

 length. The nervures of the tegmina are set with hairs, and in 



