770 
ANNUAL REPORT OF NEW*YORK 
SAY’S HBTKKOPTBROCS HKMIPTEllA. 
the margin alternating with blackish and yellowish: beneath 
blackish varied with yellowish ; feet blackish; knees and coxae 
fulvous. 
Length three-fourths of an inch. 
This is a dilated and somewhat depressed species. 
2 C. diffusus, Brownish ; abdomen dilated ; antennae and feet 
blackish. 
Inhab. Georgia. 
Body depressed pale yellowish-brown; with short hairs; 
dilated: head unarmed, the middle of the tip not reaching 
the base of the first joint of the antennoe: antenna blackish, 
hairs very obvious; basal joint a little excurved ; second joint 
a little longer than the third: thorex somewhat transversely 
punctured; lateral edge irregularly denticulated, particularly 
anteriorly ; posterior angles very obtusely rounded : scutel 
black in the middle: hemelytra immaculate; carium finely 
reticulate; the disks of the basal cellules blackish : abdomen 
dilated; margin elevated and with a series of black points on the 
edge ; feet blackish piceous. 
Length seven-tenths of an inch. 
Resembles the confluenta Nob. but is somewhat more dilated 
and the anterior lateral edge of the thorax is rectilinear; whereas 
in that species it is arquated. 
This insect was sent me by Mr. Oemler of Savannah, who 
took it in the neighborhood of that city. 
Anisoscelis, Latr. 
1. A . cor cuius, Fuscous; antenme rufous; posterior tibiae 
dilated, not sinuous. 
Inhab. Florida. 
Body reddish-brown, rather dark, minutely and densely punc¬ 
tured : head simple, with three rufous lines: antenna rufous; 
basal joint much shorter than the second, blackish above, second 
joint longest; ultimate joint rather shorter than the preceding 
one, fuscous: thorax with the angles not prominent, rounded: 
scutel undulated on the disc : ter gum on the lateral margin 
with yellowish lines at the incisures: beneath dull rufous with 
numerous black points; rostrum extending to the middle of the 
venter: thighs blackish above towards the tip, spinous beneath, 
