30 NOTES ON JAMAICAN HEMIPTERA 



Division Pilophoraria 



Tiryus punctulatus Rent. 



Taken at Mandeville, Balaclava, Montego Bay and Rich- 

 mond. Described in 1875 as a TricJiia from material taken in 

 the southern United States. 



Division Dicypharia 



Dicyphus separatus Uhler. 



I took numbers of this species from a bush, I think a species 

 of Croton, growing in a garden at Gordon Town, March 24th, 

 and at Rock Fort the next day. Dr. Reuter did not report on 

 this species but my specimens seem identical specifically with 

 others in my collection from Maryland and Florida, and my 

 friend W. J. Palmer took what I believe to be the same species 

 at Lake Temagami, Ontario, (See Can. Ent. xxxviii, p. 407, 

 1906.) In my report upon these Temagami Hemiptera I listed 

 this species as a Macrolophns under which name I had received 

 it from correspondents. I now find that it was described as a 

 Dicyphus by Dr. Uhler (Proc. Zool. Soc, 1893, p. 194), from 

 specimens taken in the island of Granada together with material 

 from the United States. 



Division Laboparia 



Halticus Uhleri Girard. 



Common at Mandeville and Balaclava. Dr. Distant has 

 redescribed this species in the Biologia as Calocoris canus. 



Division Miraria 



Collaria oleosa Dist. 



A very abundant insect everywhere on the island. 

 Trigcnotylus tenuis Rent. 



A delicate little species of which I took four examples at 

 Hope Gardens at Kingston, April 17th. 



Creontiades rubrinervis Stal. 



This was the largest Capsid taken by me on the island. I 

 found it at Mandeville, Balaclava and Appleton The type speci- 

 mens were from Mexico. Distant records it from Guatemala 

 and Uhler from St. Vincent and Granada, and Mrs. Slosson has 



