422 THE ZOOLOGIST 



collecting trip we were not fortunate enough to add any more to 

 our series of these mimics ; a disappointment, seeing that the 

 last-named Longicorn was discovered on the neighbouring Mt. 

 Penrissen, by Mr. Shelford. 



The little Ichneumons, Coenostoma pilicornis, Cam., and 

 Cyanoxorides cceruleus, Cam., the latter a beautiful little insect 

 with blue body, contrasting with the rather swollen orange-yellow 

 femora were taken. The following single specimens have been 

 identified for me by Mr. Meade- Waldo : three Braconidce, two of 

 them black Iphiaidax species, the third an orange-winged, un- 

 identified ; two Ichneumonidce, Hemipimpla rugosa, De Geer ; a 

 little green Chrysidid, Chrysis (Hexachrysis) , and a species of 

 Tenthredinidee (Hylotoma sp.). 



Among the Earwigs collected were Allodahlia scabriuscula, 

 Serv., a common species in Sarawak, and A. coriacea, Borm., a 

 rarer species, of which we had odd specimens from Mts. Matang 

 and Penrissen ; two large Pygidicrama species were kindly 

 identified for me by Dr. Burr as Kalocrania guttata, Kirby, and 

 Cranopygia, sp. n. He also identifies five other specimens as 

 Timomenus vicinus, Burr., female (two), T. vicinus, Burr., male 

 (two), and Timomenus, sp. n. (one). Several interesting species 

 of Homoptera were gathered. Chief among them were five very 

 curious Membracids, quite unlike anything we had collected 

 before. The first was a large Hypsaucheniariad species, Giganto- 

 rhahdits enderleini (of which we have a very broken fragment of 

 one collected by Shelford on Penrissen) ; I caught the first on 

 my first descent from the summit, having noticed it fly across 

 the path and alight on a tree-trunk; the second I annexed in 

 exactly the same place and manner seven days later. They were 

 the only two seen. They are much larger than the ordinary 

 Membracida in Sarawak, and in their tortoiseshell colouring 

 suggest some of the Cercopida. The pronotum is developed into 

 two processes, one extending right over the body, the other into 

 a more or less erect horn nearly an inch high and forked at the 

 tip. Mr. Distant kindly reports on these five species as follows : 

 Hybanda bullosa, Buckt., II. anodonta, Buckt.,- Gigantorhabdus 

 enderleini, Schmidt, Ebhul tessellatus, Dist., sp. n., and one still 

 unidentified. 



Several Cercopids were caught ; the pretty black-spotted, 



