BY G. W. KIRKALDY. 349 



minutely, roughly crenulate on the anterior half. First odori- 

 ferous orifices not paired. Sternites basally with a short, blunt 

 tubercle. 



5. Hyparete vitiensis Distant, Trans.Ent.Soc. London, 1901, 585. 

 "Fiji." 



6. VlTELLUS insularis Stal, 1876, I.e. 

 Rewa(Muir), 



7. Pegala biguttula Haglund, 1868, Stettin. En t.Zeit.xxix. 159. 

 Rewa (March; Muir). 



8. Geotomus pygmaeus (Dallas) Signoret, 1883, Ann. Soc. Ent. 



France (6) iii. 51, PI. 3, f. 160. 

 Rewa (March; Muir). Also from India to Japan and through 

 the Malayan Archipelago to New Caledonia; also immigrant 

 into the Hawaiian Isles. This species has been found in the soil 

 attached to plants introduced into the Hawaiian Isles, this 

 doubtless accounting in part for its extensive distribution. 



9. Coleotichus nigrovarius Walker, Schouteden, 1905, Ann. 



Mus. Hung. iii. 358, P1.9, f.8. 

 Suva(Knowles, No.122); Ovalau (Walker). 



10. C sordidus Walker, Schouteden, 1904, Gen. Ins., fasc.24, 



Pl.i., f.l. 

 11 Fiji." Also Australia, New Caledonia and the Isle of Pines. 



11. Tectocoris diophthalma (Thunberg). 



T. lineola Stal, 1873, op. eit. xi., No. 2, p.ll. 



Rewa (March; Muir), a single example somewhat intermediate 

 between Nos.ll and 12 of Plate 28 cited below; Suva, Lautoka, 

 Nadi, Ba, Rewa, Caboni and Sigatoka (Knowles, No. 31), there- 

 fore probably all over Viti Levu. The life-history has been 

 partially worked out by Dodd, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1904, 

 483-5, PI. 28. Mr. Knowles informs me that he found a half- 

 grown njmph with its setee inserted in the body of a larva of a 

 Zygoenid moth, Levuana iridescens Bethune-Baker, common in 

 Fiji as a Coconut pest. 



