1953] 
Drake — Neiv Tingidae 
153 
Rostrum brownish with dark apex, extending to base 
of mesosternum; laminae uniseriate, with inferior edge 
finely toothed, testaceous, diverging posteriorly, entirely 
open behind. Bucculae testaceous, areolate, closed in front. 
Orifice present. Hypocostal ridge narrow, uniseriate. An- 
tennae very long, slender, shortly pilose; segments i and 
II short, moderately stout, the latter smaller ; iii long, almost 
twice the length of iv ; iv long, feebly swollen, clothed with 
longer hairs. 
Pronotum moderately convex on disc, distinctly pitted, 
fuscous-brown, tricarinate, the hood, paranota and carinae 
testaceous; with clear cells; lateral carinae parallel, with 
dorsal edge rounded or arched for the entire length, com- 
posed of one row of rectangular cells ; median carina strong- 
ly foliaceous, longer but not as high as hood, with dorsal 
vein rounded, highest a little back of the hood, there biseri- 
ate; hood large, moderately compressed laterally, inflated, 
longer than high, moderately narrowed anteriorly, strongly 
sloping downward. In front, with apex extending a little 
in front of the head. Paranota large, semiglobose, reflexed 
so that the outer margin projects almost vertically over 
pronotal surface with anterior and posterior ends curved 
inwardly. Elytra almost quadrate in outline, abruptly 
widened near base, much longer and wider than abdomen, 
with outer margins finely serrate, with apices broadly 
rounded and a little separated; costal area very wide, com- 
posed of large areolae, six cells deep in widest part; basal 
part of subcostal and discoidal areas jointly elevated so as 
to form a large tumid elevation; discoidal area not reach- 
ing middle of elytra, extending one half of its length beyond 
apex of hind pronotal process, five areolae deep in widest 
part, there more strongly inflated. Wings a little longer 
than abdomen, much shorter than elytra, whitish in color. 
Type (male) and 3 paratypes (males), Lankelly Creek, 
Mcllwraith Range, Cape York, Queensland, Australia, June 
7, 1932, P. J. Darlington. 
Separated at once from the only other member of the 
genus, A. franzeni Hacker, by the larger size, larger hood, 
longer antennae, larger paranota and higher and more 
arched median carina. The turned in ends of the paranota 
form a rounded-like opening above the disc of the prono- 
