STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. 
m 
say’s hkteropterous hemiptera. 
posterior pair a little thickened : tibae dull yellowish ; posterior 
pair dilated, not undulated on the edge, fuscous with small 
yellowish spots; the dilatation not continued to the tip ; inner 
edge with a few short spines. 
Length four-fifths of an inch. 
I obtained two individuals on St. John’s River. In one of 
the two specimens the nervures on the middle of the hemelytra 
are ot a paler color, as if, in some individuals, a pale band 
might exist in that part. 
2. A. albicinctus , Ferruginous ; hemelytra with a white 
band ; posterior tibaj dilated, sinuated. 
Inhab. Florida. 
Body above light reddish brown or ferruginous: antenna 
basal joint blackish: head blackish, with three yellowish lines; 
thorax with short hair; elevated behind; lateral angles sub¬ 
acute; hemelytra with a slender, white, transverse line; mem¬ 
branous part blackish: beneath yellowish with irregular, black 
punctures: feet reddish-brown; thighs spinous beneath; pos¬ 
terior tibiae foliaceous, two or three toothed on the posterior 
edge, the superior tooth smallest; a double hyaline spot, bisected 
by the lateral carina; tip not dilated. 
Length three-fifths of an inch. 
Resembles balteatus Linn. But according to Drury’s figure, 
that species has simple posterior tibiae. It is still more like L. 
phyllopus, Linn, which however has the white line undulated and 
oblique, as figured by Stoll, the posterior thighs more elongated 
and the posterior tibiae still more dilated, particularly on the 
inner side, than this species. 
It is common in Florida. The male has but two denticula- 
tions on the dilated edge of the posterior tibiae, whilst the female 
has three; the sinuations of the edge correspond with the num¬ 
ber of teeth. 
3. A. oppositux, Reddish-brown ; hemelytra with a white 
point in the middle of the corium; antennas rufous; head 
trilineated; posterior tibia; dilated and sinuated. 
Inhab. Indiana. 
