198 Treubia Vol. IH, 2. 



1 5, Buitenzorg (;Karny, Nov. 1920). 



1 , Meloewoeng, Tjilatjap, M. Java, 1915. 



Distribution: Malay Peninsula; Sumatra; Java; Borneo; Celebes. 



■ Subfamily PHYLLODROMIlNiûE. ') 



c 



Phyllodromia notulata, STAL. 



1 (ƒ, 1 ? Buitenzorg (Karny, Sept. 1920). 

 Distribution: Malay Peninsula; Java; Borneo; Tahiti. 



Phyllodromia^'gerinanica, L. 



1 cf, Buitenzorg (August. 1920). 



1 Ç, Purmerend, Bay of Batavia (Dammerman, Nov, 1919). 

 . Distribution: cosmopolitan, 



Phyllodromia contingens, WALKER. 



1 (ƒ, Buitenzorg (1920). 



1 cf, Enkhuizen, Bay of Batavia (DAMMERMAN, 1919). 



1 (ƒ, 4ÇÇ, Krakatau (DAMMERMAN 1919 and 1920). 



This species is now for the first recorded from Java, having been 

 known before only from Singapore and Borneo. The Oxford University 

 Museum ^) contains Walker's types of his Blatta contingens $, from Sa- 

 rawak, and the synonymous Blatta liunieralis d", from Singapore, both col- 

 lected by Wallace; also specimens from Kuching, Sarawak, taken by 

 SHELFORD. 



Distribution: Singapore; Borneo; Java. 



Phyllodromia latius vittata, BRUNNER VON WATTENWYL. 



2 ^^o Buitenzorg (KARNY 1920). 



One of the specimens with ç,gg case. 



Curiously enough, Brunner's type came from Buitenzorg too, but the 

 species has since been taken on Singapore island, by Prof. C. F. BAKER, 

 and the O. U. M. has an example from Macassar (M. Burr collection). 



Distribution: Singapore; Java; Celebeé, 



Phyllodromia diagrammatica, n. sp. 



As the single specimen (i) I received from the Buitenzorg Museum, 

 had lost its locality label, it is fortunate that I have three other examples 

 of the same species before me which were recently sent to me from the 



') As in my previous paper, I continue to use the generic name Phyllodromia' 

 Serville, instead of adopting the name Blattella, suggested by A. N. Caudell in 1903 

 (Proc. Entom. Soc. Washington, Vol. V, p. 232). Though the former name, being pre- 

 occupied by a Dipterous genus, will finally have to be abandoned, yet little is gained 

 by a change before this unwieldy genus of which Shelford, in "Genera Insectorum" 

 enumerates 185 species, has been broken up, either on the lines proposed by Shelpord, 

 or in some other way. See Shelford's "Preliminary Diagnoses of some new genera of 

 Blattidae", in Entom. Monthly Mag. (2), Vol. XXIi. (1911), pp. 154—156. 



'0 Subsequently referred to as O. U. M. 



