HEMIPTERA— MIRIDAE AND ANTHOCORIDAE. 



197 



Family MIRIDAE. 

 Subfamily PHYLINAE. 



1. Campylomma annulatus, sp. n. 



Distinguished from all known species by tlie annulate second antennal 

 segment. 



Colour. — Rather uniformly pale yellowish, hemielytra pale translucent, 

 clothed with black pubescent hairs. Antennae conspicuously banded with 

 black : segment I yellowish, with two black rings ; segment II more black than 

 pale, narrow base and apex, band at middle of basal half, and a wider band at 

 start of second half, pale yellowish ; III, broken. Apex of cuneus, spot at 

 inner angle bordering membrane, and small spot at tip of clavus, black. 

 Membrane pale, veins yellowish, an inverted half-moon shaped fuscous mark 

 each side touching margin, also dusky within apex of larger areoles. Legs pale 

 yellowish, tibial spines and spot at base of each, black ; also four or five 

 setigerous black spots near apices of femora. 



Structure. — Length 2-64 mm., width 1'17 mm. Head : width -70 mm., 

 vertex -42 mm. Rostrum (imbedded) apparently attaining the hind coxae. 

 Antennae : segment I, length -173 mm. ; II, -65 mm., more slender than 

 segment I, tapering to more slender at base ; III, broken. Pronotum : length 

 •43 mm., width at base -95 mm. Body clothed with simple, black pubescent 

 hairs, intermixed with some finer pale pubescence on head, a conspicuous black 

 bristle each side at anterior angle of pronotum. 



Samoa : — Savaii : $ specimen (holotype), Safune, 4. v. 1924 (Bryan). 



2. Campylomma livida Renter. 



Campylomma livida Reuter, Ent. Tidshr., v, p. 199, 1884. 



Campylomma livida Reuter, Ofv. Finska Vet.-Soc, Fork., xlvii, No. 5, p. 14, 1905. 

 Campylomma livida Distant, Fauna Brit. India, Rhyn. II, p. 483, fig. 316, 1904. 

 Campylomma livida Poppius, Tijdschr. v. Ent., Ivi (Suppl.), p. 170, 1914. 



Upolu : — Apia : 1 specimen, 12.ix.l923 (Swezey & Wilder). 

 Originally described from Bengal, but since recorded from Victoria, 

 Australia (Reuter, 1905), and from Formosa (Poppius, 1914). 



