FROM SARAWAK.--BY J. C. MOULTON. 187* 
Distant's figure) form a little group characterized by 
the transverse veins at base of second and third apical 
areas only of the tegmina being infuscated. 
Habitat : Borneo. 
There are four examples of this form in the Sarawak 
Museum from Sadong and Kuching; but there are 
specimens of another form which differ in one charac¬ 
teristic only and I therefore regard them as a variety 
of this species and describe as under : — 
6 a .—Cosmopsaltria diiarum, Wlk. var. vera , nov. 
Male. Differs from typical form *only in the position 
of lateral fascia on pronotum. This forms a straight 
dark line from base of eye, along lateral margin to 
junction of tegmen. This is an invariable feature in 
the seven examples before me, and is the only difference 
1 can detect between it and the typical form, but it is 
sufficient to distinguish the two easily. 
F em ale. U nkn o w n. 
Type male , from Kedurong Light house, 1910 (Sar. 
Mus.). 
Habitat. Sarawak: Bararn, Point and Kedurong 
Point. 
Two of the seven examples of this variety, vary in 
the extent of the piceous margin to the opercula, which 
is slightly more reduced than in the other five, or than 
in the typical form. 
7 .—Cosmopsaltria agatha, sp. n. 
Male. Head, pronotum and mesonotum, ochreous- 
olive ; face anteriorly and transversely striated with 
black, a large black spot on face at base of rostrum. 
Black central fascia on front, continued across vertex 
enclosing ocelli; inner margin of vertex to the eyes 
black, and a curved black line from inner margin 
towards base of eye. Pronotum with two narrow black 
central longitudinal fasciae united posteriorly; exteriorly 
an irregular black spot joining these fasciae anteriorly; 
* The typical form is well figured by Distant in his Monograph of 
Oriental Cicadidae” under the name of “C. Uinta (latilinea, var?/’, and he 
describes the characteristic marking on the pronotum thus:—“pronotum 
with a central double fascia united at base. * a large sub l at era/, spot on, each 
side, and, a spot beneath on basal margin." His figure shows well how these 
last two markings, together with the sublateral fascia of the mesonotum, 
form one continuous sublateral fascia. (*The italics arc mine). 
