MEMBRA ClDJE. 
51 
with a bright yellow patch, spotted; frons without any yellow patches ; tegmina 
black ; metopidium with three conspicuous keels. 
Size, 7x3 mm. 
Habitat. —Volcan de Chiriqui, elevation 2000 to 3500 feet. 
ENCIIENOPA PORRECTA, n.s. 
(Plate VI. figs. 5, 5a, 5b.) 
Small, robust; procephalic born stout, obtuse, blunt, curved forwards; the first 
and second tibiae dilated, the hinder legs serrated; tarsi fulvous; pronotum in 
general colour red-ochreous, with a pale oehreous patch on the dorsum, interrupted 
in the middle by a dark spot; tegmina dense reddish-brown, the hind border 
dark brown ; procephalon densely punctured, as also is the frons ; the abdomen of 
the female furnished with two valves including the saws. 
Extreme length and breadth 8x4 mm. 
Habitat .—New York. 
ENCHENOPA SERICEA. 
(Plate VI. fig. 6.) 
Walk. List Homopt. Ins. ii. p. 493. Fowler, B.C.A. Tab. I. fig. 13. 
Colour ferruginous red. Pronotum with a porrect horn, compressed. Insect 
clothed with yellow pubescence. Minutely punctured. The horn has three carinse 
in each side. Hind-tibiae with stout spines ; fore-tibiae spatulate. Underside black. 
Tegmina fuscous. Expanse of wings, 14 m.m. 
Habitat. —Cuernavaca, Mexico, Panama, Yolcan de Chiriqui, Venezuela. 
Figured, by permission, from the plate, as above described, in the E.C.A. 
ENCHENOPA MIN AMEN, n.s. 
(Plate VI. figs. 7 to 7c.) 
Concolorous dark reddish brown, powdered with small grey stellate dots; 
pronotum conical, ending anteriorly with a short truncated porrect process; this 
pronotal portion is easily detached from the rest of the body of the insect; dorsal 
ridge nearly straight, and much short of reaching the tips of the tegmina; tegmina 
somewhat pointed and obscurely traversed by curved nervures; legs weak, sordid 
oehreous, and only slightly spatulate. 
The neuration of the figured tegmina is abnormal, and leads to some doubt as to 
its genus being rightly assigned as above. Additional examples are desirable. 
Size, 9x3 mm. 
Habitat. — Cachabe, Ecuador; “low elevation” (Rosenburg, Nov. and Dec.). 
