ADDENDUM. 



2. Tettigades comtacta, Fern. 



Nerms tramiersus 1 us rectus, valdi obliquus, angulum pcroblusum 

 finqens, 2o ejus longitudine (livisas ; 2us subcuruiis, mlde 

 obliquus, angulum perobtusumjingens, \o paullh brevior ; 3«s 

 incurt'us,fere ereclus, angulum ohlusumfingens ; Aus excurvus, 

 ereclus, angulum obtusumjingens. Si longitudine. 

 Second marginal aieolet longer than the first : first cross-vein 

 straight, very slanting, forming an extremely obtuse angle, parted 

 from the second by its length ; second very slightly curved, very 

 slanting, fonning an extremely obtuse angle, a little shorter than 

 the first ; third curved inward, nearly upright, forming an obtuse 

 angle ; fourth curved outward, upright, forming an obtuse angle, as 

 long as the third ; fifth very slightly curved, slightly slanting, form- 

 ing an acute angle. Body black, short, broad, cloihed with tawny 

 hairs : head narrower than the fore-chest ; face notched in front, 

 adorned with some tawny dots ; mouth tawny, with a black tip, 

 reaching the middle hips : feelers black, eyes prominent : hind 

 border and sides of the fore-chest tawny ; sides slightly angular : 

 hind border of the middle chest tawny, very slightly excavated : 

 abdomen black, obconical, a little narrower and longer than the 

 chest ; a tawny stripe on each side beneath : legs black, clothed 

 with tawny hairs ; thighs tawny beneath ; four posterior shanks 

 tawny, with black tips ; fore-thighs anticd with two tawny teeth of 

 moderate size : wings colourless ; veins tawny, clouded in the disk 

 with pale brown ; most of the cross-veins brown ; fore-flaps luteous. 

 Length of the body 8 lines ; of the wings 20 lines. 

 a. West Coast of America. Presented by Captain Kellett and 

 Lieutenant Wood. 



