36 LISt OF HOMOPTEROUS INSECTS. 
Cicapa SPOLIATA. 
Fom. Viridis ; mesothorax vittis quatuor obconicis testaceis ; ab- 
domen fulvum, segmentis viridi marginalis ; ale vitrea, venis 
viridibus testaceo variis. 
Female. Green. Head very little narrower than the protho- 
rax. Border of the prothorax narrow, very little broader on each 
side. Mesothorax with four obconical testaceous stripes ; the middle 
Nes short. Abdomen tawny; hind borders of the segments green. 
ings vitreous; veins green, partly testaceous. Fore wings with 
the first and second transverse veins short, nearly upright; first 
slightly curved, a little longer than the second, from which it is 
parted by about thrice its length; second straight; third and fourth 
oblique; third shorter than the fourth, which is slightly curved. 
Length of the body 7 lines ; of the wings 20 lines. 
a. ? From Mr. Shuckard’s collection. 
CICADA DESIGNATA. 
Fem. Testaceo-viridis ; caput apud ocellos et antice rufum ; pro- 
thoraw vitta suturis margineque rufis; mesothorax postice 
rufus ; abdominis segmenta rufo marginata; tibie tarsique 
rufa; ale vitree, venis rufis apice nigris. 
Female. Testaceous-green, pale testaceous beneath. Head red 
about the ocelli and in front. Proboscis red. Prothorax with a red 
stripe, and with red sutures and borders. Mesothorax red hind- 
ward. Abdomen with a red band on the hind border of each seg- 
ment. Tibie and tarsi mostly red. Wings vitreous; veins red, 
black towards the tips. Fore wings with an additional marginal 
areolet; the first transverse vein forming an acute angle, which 
emits a vein to the border; second, third and fourth transverse 
veins straight, oblique; third longer than the second, shorter than 
the fourth. Length of the body 7 lines; of the wings 18 lines. 
a, ——? 
Genus CEPHALOXYS, Cat. Hom. p. 232. 
CEPHALOXYS OCCIDENIS. 
Mas. Viridis ; caput acutum ; abdomen crasswm, thorace latius, 
carina dorsali, apice ventreque testacets ; pedes breves, graciles ; 
Jemora antica crassa, sublus tridentata; ale vitree, venis 
viridibus. 
