240 
line very faintly indicated on the pronotum, two have it just 
traceable about the base, and from the other it is absent. The 
front claws of the female are simple; on the male one claw is 
much thicker than the other and much more curved ; on the 
has on it a conspicuous transverse ridge that is barely indicated 
on the male. The horns on the head of the male are rather 
more than half the length of the front tibiae on two specimens, 
but are rather less on the type. 
CHLOROBAPTA FRONTALIS, Don. 
. Xxvii., fig. 90. 
There are in the National Museum two males from 
Kookynie and Norseman, and one in the South Australian 
from Ankertell, that I cannot satisfy myself are 
pygidium more conspicuous. The markings are of a clear 
sulphur-yellow, not the dingy shade of yellow that the green 
markings often turn to with age or improper treatment, and 
of living specimens ; frontalis, however, is such an extremely 
variable species, that it does not appear desirable to describe 
hese specimens as representing a new species, or even to give 
them a varietal name. 
DraPHoNi4 EUvCLENSIS, Blackb. 
specimen of this species in which 
| r. W. du Bou a 
the prothoracic blotch is reduced to a slight infuscation at the 
. apical third. - | 
i) Js ANOPLOGNATHUS PRASINUS, Cast., formerly Paranonca. 9 
D e ae Pt XXvii., fig. 68. d t 
. The history of this species is somewhat complicated ; a 
one time it was regarded as a New Zealand species, and à 
————— 
ii., 1835-40, p. 143. 
