CICADELLINAE: PART 2. NEW WORLD CICADELLINI 855 
studied by earlier workers. I have not seen a type of coccinea and it seems 
doubtful if one exists. I have been unable to justify any further segregates on 
morphological grounds, although the amount of variation is great. Of the 
numerous varieties studied, specimens from the Cape Hatteras and Wilming- 
ton areas of North Carolina most nearly fit Forster’s original description of 
coccinea. I follow a number of earlier writers in placing Tettigonia quadrivittata 

a 
FIGURES 687, 688.—687, Graphocephala fennahi, n. sp. (from specimen from 
Swannanoa, North Carolina; only aedeagal shaft shown in /; plate not 
shown in c): p, Forewing. Closely stippled areas are green; sparsely stippled 
areas are red. 688, G. versuta (Say) (c from specimen from Saluda County, 
South Carolina; p from Patuxent, Maryland; q from Lauderdale County, 
Tennessee; s from Marion County, Florida; e¢, 7, t, from Raleigh, North 
Carolina): p, Aedeagus and paraphyses, from lateral view; q-s, male pygofer, 
left side, from dorsal view; f, forewing. 

