BUFFALO SOCIETY OF NATURAL SCIENCES 229 



have a very different aspect from our dark colored northern 

 specimens but I can find no structural character on which to 

 separate them. 



346. Paracoelidia tuberculata Baker. 



At Sevenoaks I took one large female over 6 mm. in 

 length. This species bears a strong resemblance to Neoccelidia 

 lineata but the colors are paler, the vertex is a little more 

 pointed and the clypeus is strongly tuberculate; which latter 

 character will at once distinguish it from any allied form known 

 to me. 



Subfamily Cicadulinae. 



347. Cicadula 6=notata Fallen. 

 Sanford and Ft. Myers; two examples. 



348. Balclutha impicta VanDuzee. 

 Crescent City; two examples. 



349. Eugnathodus abdominalis VanDuzee. 

 Sanford, Clearwater and Ft. Myers; occasional. 



Subfamily Typhlocybina;. 



350. Empoasca mali LaBaron. 



Crescent City, Sanford, Ft. Myers, Estero. As taken in 

 Florida this species is a little larger than the next. 



351. Empoasca flavescens Fabricius. 



Crescent City and Estero. Prof. Gillette separates this 

 species from the preceding by its having but three pale spots on 

 the anterior margin of the pronotum. 



352. Eupteryx flavoscuta Gillette. 



Sanford and Sevenoaks; two examples. These are of the 

 form having the upper surface deep smoky black with the 

 vertex before and the costal margin broadly yellowish. 



353 Typhlocyba comes Say. 



Crescent City, Sevenoaks and Estero. The typical form of 

 this species was taken occasionally on grape vines at these 

 localities. 



354 Typhlocyba rubricata n. sp. 



Aspect of Dicraneura but with typical Typhlocyba venation and per- 

 taining to that section of the genus named Zyginia by Fieber. Color pale 

 yellowish becoming fulvous on the abdomen and more obscure on the vertex 

 and scutellum; pronotum and elytra dark dull sanguineous, the former be- 

 coming paler anteriorly and brighter red along either side, the latter with 



