224 
MEMBJIA CIDJE. 
This species is widely spread over Asia and Africa. 
Size, 8x5 mm. 
Habitat. —Egypt, Abyssinia, Cape of Good Hope, India, Ceylon. 
OXYRHACHIS CONCOLOR, n.s. 
(Plate XLIX. figs. 4, 4a.) 
Colour uniformly dark ferruginous. Pronotum as in the previous species with 
porrect supralmmerals. Surface rather greyish and pilose. Tibise of the first and 
second pair of legs flattened, hut hardly spatulate. Tegmina dense, obscurely veined’ 
and acute at the tips. 
Habitat .—The Cape of Good Hope. 
Mr. C. P. Lounsbury. 
This does not agree witli 0. furcicornis from South Africa, as the horns are not 
truncated. 
OXYRHACHIS NEGLECTUS. 
(Plate XLIX. figs. 5, 5a.) 
Colour pale ochreous, with a grey pubescence. Pronotum long, and with the 
supralmmerals rather obtuse from a profile view, but the supralmmerals porrect and 
divergent from the dorsal aspect. Posterior horn rapidly tapers to a point, and is 
rather shorter than the tegmina. Scutellum covered by the pronotum. Tegmina 
clear hyaline, with yellow neuration and a broad limbus. Legs yellowish and only 
feebly dilated. 
Size, 7x3 mm. 
Habitat .—South Australia. 
OXYRHACHIS LIGNICOLA. 
(Plate XLIX. figs. G, 6a, Gb.) 
Black. Pronotum with a straight dorsal ridge, tapering to a long acute point, 
rather recurved. 
Suprahumeral horns moderately long, and projected in the same line with the 
dorsum. A white pilose patch on the scutellum, which, in some specimens, also 
covers the lower part of the frons, under the shoulders, and the upper part of 
the abdomen in the females. Tegmina longer than the pronotum, smoky hyaline 
with fine brown neuration. Legs of the female ochreous-yellow. The upper part of 
the frons is in the female brown and pilose. The male is somewhat smaller, and the 
pectus is clothed with white pilose matter. The legs are brown and tufted with 
the same colour, and also the edges of the abdominal rings. 
Mr. Ernest Green, of the Boyal Botanical Gardens, at Peradeniya, Ceylon, kindly 
forwarded me seven or eight specimens, captured at Baniseram in South India; and 
