BUFFALO SOCIETY OF NATURAL SCIENCES 2"] 



deeper impression on the disk of the scutellum, the narrower 

 embolium, and the different coloring. 



Termatophylidea pilosa Retit. 



Quite a number of specimens of this very interesting species 

 were beaten from bushes and small trees at Mandeville, Balac- 

 lava and Montego Bay. Dr. Reuter writes me that this is the 

 first American representative he has seen of this subfamily of 

 the AnthocoridcB. He will describe the genus and species, both 

 of which are new, in a paper on the Termatophy linen he now 

 has in preparation. 



Family Capsidse 



The Capsidse were well represented among the material 

 taken in Jamaica. The specimens averaged much smaller than 

 those found in the United States and in most cases but few 

 individuals of each species were taken, but this was true of all 

 the Hemiptera I took on the island. Some of these Capsids 

 were very prettily colored and marked and the collection on the 

 whole was an interesting one. Dr. O. M. Reuter of Helsing- 

 fors very kindly offered to study these for me and has published 

 the results of this study in the Of. Finsk Vet-Soc. Forhandl. 

 xlix. No.. 5, pp. i to 27, 1907, to the pages of which paper 

 reference is made after the name of each new genus and species. 

 In this paper Dr. Reuter has described as new seven genera, 

 twenty nine species and two varieties from the material brought 

 home by me. In the nomenclature and arrangement of the 

 divisions, and so far as possible of the genera, I have followed 

 the classification published by Dr. Reuter in the Festschrift fur 

 Palmen No. i, p. 27 et seq. , 1905. 



Division Plagiognatharia 



Psallus atomophorus Reut. (n. sp. p. 22.) 



Two examples taken at Rock Fort near Kingston, March 

 25th. This is a delicate little species of a pale yellow color with 

 a fuscous cloud across the elytra and the whole upper surface 

 dotted with brown points. 



Psallus (?) sulphureus Reut. (n. sp. , p. 23.) 



Taken in numbers along the roadside at Rock Fort. It is 

 a pale yellow species with a black point on the apex of the 

 cuneus and a dot a little behind this on the margin of the 

 maculated membrane. 



