498 HEMIPT^ROLOGICAI, GLEANINGS 



G. Barber. It is distinct by its fulvous color, clear markings, 

 regularly and distinctly punctate nervures, narrow produced 

 vertex, narrow black front and fulvous clypeus. 



Ormenis barberi n. sp. 



Allied to septentrionalis but larger and of a more opaque 

 and yellowish green. Length to tip of closed elytra 12 mm. 



Front transverse; apical margin nearly as long as the basal, distinctly 

 roundedly emarginate across the base of the clypens ; lateral elevated mar- 

 gins regularly arcuated; median keel very obtuse but distinct toward the 

 base; surface of the front regularly rounded over to the pronotal margin 

 with no transverse ridge indicating the vertex or barely a trace laterally, 

 deflected almost parallel with the margins. Pronotum as in septentrionalis, 

 the carina? obsolete. Mesonotum flattish with the carina? nearly obsolete as in 

 the allied species. Elytra shaped as in septentrionalis except that they are 

 a little wider basally, the costal area being distinctly less narrowed at 

 base; nervures thicker and more reticulated with the basal areas broader 

 than in septentrionalis; apical margin truncated with both angles rounded 

 as in that species; both subapical lines united with the subcostal nervure, 

 the inner sometimes much broken on its basal half, placed a little nearer to 

 the outer than that is from the apical margin. 



Color a rather dull yellowish green, the whole upper surface more or 

 less wkitish-pruinose ; clypeus, lower surface of the body, legs and costal 

 margin pale yellowish tinged more or less with fulvous or even with san- 

 guineous, especially on the tibiae. Front and sometimes the mesonotum 

 paler or tinged with fulvous. Second antennal joint orange, the seta black. 

 Spines of the posterior tibia? tipped with black. 



Described from five examples, representing both sexes, 

 taken in the Huachuca Mts. , Arizona, in July 1905, by Mr. H. G. 

 Barber of New York. 



This is a larger and more yellowish species than septentrio- 

 nalis; the front wants the obtuse transverse subbasal carina and 

 has the apex more emarginate and subequal to the base, not 

 straight and distinctly shorter as in septentrionalis; the form 

 and venation of the elytra also shows a constant difference as 

 noted. Ormenis pallescens Stal is a larger and paler species 

 with longer front and acute inner elytral angles. I take 

 pleasure in naming this species after the enthusiastic Hemip- 

 terist whose diligent collecting in the Huachuca Mountains has 

 added a number of interesting species to our fauna. 



Ormenis saucia n. sp. 



Allied to perpusilla Walker. Pale greenish-white with the 

 clypeus and mesonotum fulvous. Length 7—10 mm. 



