296 • [.May, 
at the lower end of the emboHum ; membrane-suture obliterated by the 
markings. Membrane covered with longer and more angular yellow lines, 
less closely in the middle, on the inner margin the lines are straight and 
parallel ; outer margin narrowly black. Sternum, coxw, scapulce, pleurce, and 
pa/rapleurce entirely pale yellow. Legs pale yellow ; 1st pair, <? , tihice thick- 
ened to the apex, curved ; palce long, narrow, round-cultrate ; ? , tibice not 
thickened, pala narrower than in the <? ; 2nd pair, end of the thighs, tibice, 
and tarsi brown or blackish ; 3rd pair, cilia of the tarsi black. 
Abdomen pale ochreous, first 3 segments fuscous-black, posteriorly pale. 
Length 3i lines. 
Three ^ and one $ taken by Dr. Power, in Locli Gelly, FifesHre, 
August, 1868. 
Allied to G. German, Fieb., which is 4 lines long, has the facial 
depression extending scarcely beyond the angles of the eyes, the 
middle of the sternum and the inner side of the scapulre and pleurae 
black, the anterior tibiae swollen, the hairs of the posterior tibiae 
(? tarsi) yellowish, the membrane suture yellowish, &c. 
Family 2.— Sigaeid^. 
Gen7is 1. — Stgara, Fab. 
Species 2. — Sigaea Poweei, n. sp. 
Ochreous, with well-defined black-brown markings, dull. 
Head ochreous ; crown, in the middle, with a large wedge-shaped brown mark, its 
widest part at the base of the head. 
Thorax — Pronotum brown-black, in the middle an ochreous line widened posteriorly 
into the pale hinder margin, the sides also broadly pale ochreous. Scutellum 
black. Elytra — claviis black-brown, a small spot posteriorly, and the entire 
inner margin, ochreous ; claval suture narrowly pale. Corimn ochreous, at 
the base a dentate patch, across the middle another, more irregularly dentate, 
the longest lobe on the inner side, followed by two curved, sublinear spots, 
all brown-black ; marginal channel pale, with two long, dark streaks opposite 
the large brown patches. Membrane infuscated, gradually darker to the 
apex. Legs yellow. Length 1 line. 
Very like S. minutissimn, but by its general habit, larger bulk, and 
definite markings, appears to be distinct. 
A single specimen was captured by Dr. Power, in the New Forest, 
in 1866, in company with Agahus brunneus. 
Species 3. — Sigaea Scholtzi. 
Sigaea Scholtzi, Fieb., Europ. Hem. 90, 4 (1861). 
Pale ochreous with ill-defined fuscous spots, shining. 
Head, including the large black eyes, wider than the pronotum ; crown in the 
middle of the posterior margin raised to a point, which is brown ; front, on 
the curve, with 3 brown longitudinal streaks. 
