Uhler.] 414 [April 17, 



ing a brownish, or red, line on the middle; antennae as long as the 

 hemelytra, the basal joint stout, narrower at base, about as long as 

 the head and neck together, yellow, red at base and tip ; second 

 joint twice the length of the first, thickened at tip, yellow, a little 

 embrowned at base and broadly blackish at tip ; third more slender, 

 a little shorter than the second, fuscous, yellow at base ; fourth a lit- 

 tle longer than the basal one, fuscous, paler at tip. Rostrum slender, 

 reaching to the base of the venter, testaceous, piceous at tip. Pro- 

 notum yellowish, smooth, the anterior lobe yellow, or rosy, opaque, 

 callosities bright yellow, polished, margined before and behind with 

 red ; posterior lobe white, obsoletely punctured and shagreened, 

 tinged with rosy on the sides and humeral angles. Pectus yellow, 

 polished, more or less tinged with red ; legs yellow, slender, the tarsi 

 infuscated at tip. Scutellum yellow, tinged with rosy, opaque, mi- 

 nutely pubescent, obsoletely carinated on the middle line. Hemely- 

 tra yellow, finely pubescent, the clavus red on the middle, corium 

 margined inwardly with red ; on the disk posteriorly and reaching to 

 the cuneus is an oblong red spot, exterior to this a streak which co- 

 alesces with a small spot at the base of the cuneus ; cuneus at tip, and 

 veins of the basal areole of membrane red, or reddish brown ; mem- 

 brane yellowish, translucent, a little clouded at the tip. Venter 

 smooth, yellow, more or less rosy, particularly on the sides and anal 

 segment. Length, 4| millims. Thoracic breadth, hardly 1 millim. 



No. 101, Harris' Collection, cf. " New Hampshire, Mr. Leonard'. 

 Capsus famelicus Say, MSS., so determined by himself. 



A variety has the whole disk of the corium red ; while another 

 variety is almost entirely yellow. 



TINGIDIDiE. 



Tingis Fab. 

 1. T. ciliata. 



Tingis ciliata Say, Hem. New Harm., 26, 1. Tingis hyalina 

 H.-Schf., Wanz. Ins., V, 84, fig. 532. 



No. 140, Harris' Collection, cf, ?. "Florence, Ala. January 

 and February, 1836, Prof. Hentz." 



One specimen with a printed label No. 178, belongs here. 



This widely distributed species lives, sometimes in vast swarms, 

 upon the underside of leaves of sycamore. Although often met with 



