1^! E. T. Atkinson — Notes on Indian Rliynchota. [No. 1, 



1. EURYBRACHYS VENUSTA, Stal. 

 Euryhrachys venusta, Stal, Stettin Ent. Zeit. xxiv, p. 245 (1863). 



$ . Sanguineous ; head, thorax anteriorly and barely basal half 

 of tegmina olivaceous- green ; the basal half of the tegmina spotted 

 fuscous, and the base itself, sanguineous ; corium behind the middle and 

 commissural limbus of clavus, greyish, veined subolivaceous ; wings 

 whitish, subsanguineous at the base and veined sanguineous : abdomen 

 sordid stramineous (sanguineous when alive?), beneath banded black. 

 In stature like E. tomentosa, Fabr., differs in having the tegmina more 

 distinctly and densely veined behind the middle. Tegmina twice longer 

 than broad, subcoriaceous before the middle, opaque (Stal) , Long, lU j 

 exp. teg., 25 millims. 



Reported from Mlgiris. 



2. EuRYBRACHYS TOMENTOSA, Fabricius. 



Cicada tomentosa, Fabricins, Syst. Ent. ii, p. 683 (1775) ; Spec. Ins. ii, p. 324 

 (1781) ; Mant. Ins. ii, p. 269 (1787) ; Ent. Syst. iv, p. 30 (1794). 



Lystra tomentosa, Fabricius, Syst. Rhyng. p. 60 (1803) ; Germar in Thon's 

 Archiv. ii, fasc. 2, p. 55 (1830). 



Euryhrachys tomentosa, Burm., Handb. Ent. ii (i) p. 150 (1835); Am. & Serv,, 

 Hist. Nat. Ins. Hem. p. 517 (1843) j Walker, List. Horn. B. M. ii, p. 381 (1851) j 

 Stal, Hem. Fabr. ii, p. 100 (1869). 



$ . Green-olivaceous ; tegmina olivaceous-green, with small scat- 

 tered spots and two oblique bands, flavescent, apical part flavescent- 

 greyish ; small apical spots arranged in two transverse rows and a larger 

 spot at the commissure, black, shining : wings whitish, a band abbre- 

 viated inwards behind the middle and a band continued through, placed 

 near the apex, black : pectus and feet sanguineous, tibiae and last pair 

 of tarsi infuscate ; abdomen croceous, disc of venter, black. Closely 

 allied to E. spinosa, Fabr., differs in the head a little broader, almost 

 broader than the thorax, tegmina more ample, much spotted in rows 

 at the apex, wings adorned with a band running through them near the 

 apex, not by a small spot, and the first pair of tibias above a little more 

 diLited (Stal). Exp. teg., 24 ; broad, 4 millims. 



Reported from Sumatra, India: B.fraterna, Stal [Of vers. K. V.-A. 

 Foi'h. p. 450 (1858)], from Ceylon is hardly distinguishable from 

 E. tomentosa, Fabr. 



3. EURYBRACHYS BTMACULATA, FabriciuS. 



Lystra 2-maculata, Fabricius, Syst. Rhyng. p. 60 (1803). 



Lystra himaculata, Germar, in Thon's Arch, ii, fasc. 2, p. 55, (1830.) 



Euryhrachys himaculata, Stal, Hem. Fabr. ii, p. 100 ^1869). 



