798 
ANNUAL REPORT OF NEW-YORK 
SAY’S hetbropterous hkmiptera. 
7. A. granulatus , Second joint of the antennae shorter than 
the third; corium but little longer than the scutel, edge of tho 
thorax obtusely emarginate. 
Inhab. Florida and Indiana. 
Body fuscous, densely granulated: head with an impressed 
line each side near the eyes and two near the middle, an acuto 
point before the eyes and an obtuse tip: antennce rather short, 
second and fourth joints equal; third joint longest: thorax 
slightly lincated before, but without any appearance of elevated 
line behind ; lateral edge obtusely emarginate before the middle : 
scutel broad, obtuse at tip : hemelytra narrower than the abdo¬ 
men; humerus not dilated; nervures distinct; corium but little 
longer than the scutel, with rather prominent nervures; mem¬ 
brane dull whitish: wings as long as the hemelytra: ter gum, 
beneath the wings, rufous: rostrum not longer than the head. 
Length one-fifth of an inch. 
I found it common in Florida. 
"W ith the two following species, it possesses many characters 
in common with Aneurus and may be considered as the connec¬ 
ting link with that genus. It has the short, dilated rostrum; 
the second joint of the antennse shorter than the third; tho 
wide, obtuse scutel; the short feet, and the anterior feet set 
wide apart as in that genus, but the appearance of the head 
and the structure of the hemelytra correspond with Aradus, 
excepting the brevity of the corium. 
8. A. emarginatus , 1 horax obtusely emarginate before the 
middle, edge with out elevated lines behind. 
Inhab. Mexico. 
Body black: head with an acute tubercle at base of tho 
antennae, and another behind the e) r e : antennce , first joint more 
robust than the others, rather suddenly attenuated at base, some¬ 
what larger than the apicial prominence of the head ; second 
joint shorter than the first, and not longer than the last; third 
joint longest; terminal joint attenuated at base, pale at- tip : 
thorax transversely impressed in tho middle, the impression 
terminating each side in an obtuse emargination, edge very 
minutely crenate; anterior margin slightly quadrilobate; heme- 
