CICADELLINAE: PART 2. NEW WORLD CICADELLINI 295 
outer apical cell, with four apical cells of which base of fourth is more prox- 
imal than base of third, without an anteapical plexus of veins, texture sub- 
hyaline; wings of female in rest position exceeding apex of ovipositor. Hind- 
leg with length of basal tarsomere greater than combined length of more dis- 
tal tarsomeres, otherwise as in Paromenia. 
Male genitalia: Pygofer moderately produced, macrosetae irregularly dis- 
tributed on apical half, without processes. Plates triangular, very short, 
narrowed at midlength, not extending nearly as far posteriorly as pygofer 
apex, each with a few uniseriate macrosetae in basal half. Style extending ap- 
proximately as far posteriorly as connective, obliquely truncate at apex. Con- 
nective Y-shaped, carinate. Aedeagus with shaft short, strongly convex in 
lateral view, apex decurved in an acute process. Paraphyses absent. 
Female abdominal sternum VII produced and with a pair of concavities at 
apex. Ovipositor with most of dorsal margin of second valvula bearing convex, 
close-set teeth; apex blunt, with posterodorsal and posteroventral margins 
slightly concave, the latter denticulate. Pygofer as in Paromenia. 
jozima, new genus, is related to Paromenia Melichar, and Dasmeusa Melichar. 
The form of the aedeagus and the Y-shaped connective of Jozima will readily 
separate males from Paromenia. Dasmeusa specimens are more delicate and slen- 
der and have paraphyses in the male genitalia. The form of the apex of the 
clypellus in Jozima is similar to that found in Baleja Melichar. Specimens of 
_ Jozima are similar in appearance to Dasmeusa and many species of Paromenia, 
dull yellow, with the crown and face suffused with orange in some specimens. 
Walker described Tettigonia leucopa from Peru. I have seen a specimen in the 
British Museum from the Napo River area. The head had been glued on and 
did not fit the original description at all. The abdomen (female) had been 
removed and glued to the card that bore the specimen. The color of the ab- 
domen agreed with Walker’s description. I have used illustrations of it to 
determine the species to which I have applied Walker’s name, here. I have 
seen specimens of this species from Cuzco, Peru; Madre de Dios, Peru; Mar- 
capata, Peru; and Blanca Flor, Bolivia. 
43. Genus BALEJA MELIcHAR 
FicuRES 242-246 
Baleja Melichar, 1926a:344. Type-species: Tettigonia flavoguttata Latreille, by subsequent 
designation of China, 1938d:184. 
Length of male 8.8-12.1 mm, of female 9.3-11.5 mm. 
Head well produced, median length of crown varying from three-fourths of 
to slightly greater than interocular width, and from slightly less than one-half 
to slightly more than seven-tenths transocular width, anterior margin narrow- 
ly rounded to acutely subangular in dorsal view, without a carina at transition 
from crown to face, ocelli located on or slightly behind a line between anterior 
eye angles, each approximately equidistant from adjacent anterior eye angle 
and median line of crown, crown with disk flat or (usually) shallowly concave, 
without a median fovea and without sculpturing or setae, lateral clypeal 
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