Introduction 
v 
tions developed in Metcalf’s Bibliography of the Homoptera Auchenorhyneha. 
Thus Smith 1950a: 63 is a better method of citation than the present 
method: Smith, Aim. Mag. Nat. Hist (12) 5: 63. 
Unfortunately this method was not adopted in the earlier numbers of 
this series and since about three-fourths of the catalogues are in manu- 
script, it was not deemed wise to make this change at this time. 
FORM OF THE PRESENT CATALOGUE 
This catalogue follows the general form of the present series. The family 
is divided into genera which are arranged in as nearly a phylogenetic order 
as our present knowledge will permit. The species are arranged under the 
genera in alphabetic sequence. Titles of books are not abbreviated but are 
condensed if they are unduly long. The abbreviations of journal references 
follow in general the scheme proposed in the World List of Scientific Pe- 
riodicals with minor exceptions, the chief difference being that the names of 
countries, states, cities and other geographical units are not abbreviated. 
A few references are listed under their titles rather than under the ab- 
breviations of the journals in which they were published, because in these 
cases the titles are usually better known than the journals, for example, 
Van Duzee 1917 Catalogue of Hemiptera of America North of Mexico 
not Techn. Bull. California Agr. Exp. Sta. Ent. 2. If the journal has been 
published in series the abbreviation of the journal is followed by a series 
number or by such an abbreviation as n. s. (new series), o. s. (old series), 
n. f. (neue Folge), or the like. This is followed by a note indicating the 
nature of the reference. 
The notes which follow the references are generally self explanatory, 
but three points may be mentioned here. Such notations as “[described],” 
“[notes],” “[key],” and the like are intended to be suggestive rather than 
precise or exclusive. The notation “[error]” means not accepted in this 
catalogue. Usually the latest published synonymy is accepted, but not 
always. The other notation “[comparative note]” is used to designate 
those references, often of the greatest taxonomic significance, in which two 
generic, specific or other groups are compared. All references have been 
checked against the original save those marked with an asterisk (*), which 
have been accepted from reliable sources. Every effort has been made to 
have the references full and complete and to give an indication of the 
character of the data contained. Where the writer knows that reprints 
have been issued with different pagination, this is indicated in parentheses 
following the page numbers of the original. In a few cases, where the matter 
has been reprinted under a different title with different pagination, separate 
references are given. Where authentic editions have been published these 
have been indicated by separate references. Genera established without 
