CICADELLINAE: PART 2, NEW WORLD CICADELLINI 925 
area on each side with the ocellus at its anterior end. Pronotum with a 
longitudinal vitta behind each eye, a pair of median longitudinal black stripes 
which are slightly divergent behind midlength, sometimes interrupted, and 
failing to attain posterior pronotal margin, and occasionally with a small 
black spot near anterior margin more laterally than median lines, and/or a 
narrow oblique slightly diagonal black line on each side extending an- 
teromesally from humeral margin; scutellum with a pair of short longitudinal 
black markings before transverse sulcus; forewing with costal, brachial, and 
inner and outer claval cells tan, the inner claval occasionally yellowish near 
commissural wing margin; middle anteapical cell and remainder of corium 
(except membrane) purple with darker purple markings along longitudinal 
veins, the paler purple often in form of three corial spots; face yellow with a 
narrow W-shaped marking on the clypeus, extremities of transclypeal suture 
and median portion of clypellus, black; thoracic pleura yellow, marked with 
black; legs sordid yellow. 
Holotype male, Nagua, Oriente, Cuba, July 29, 1922 (S. C. Bruner and C. 
H. Ballou), on ‘“‘Caesaria hirsuta’’, also bearing labels: ‘“‘Cicadella sp.” and 
“Paratype” and “Poeciloscarta cardini M. & B.’’; two additional specimens, 
both bearing “paratype” labels, Central Oriente, Cuba, September 12, 1934 
(L. C. Scaramuzza); one specimen, bearing a “paratype” label, Central 
Jaronu, Cuba, June 19, 1934 (L. C. Scaramuzza), three specimens of which 
two bear “‘paratype”’ labels and the third a “‘holotype”’ label, Jaronu, June 25, 
1934 (L. C. Scaramuzza), all three bearing the label ‘““E. E. A. Cuba, Ento. 
No. 8688” and one of the “paratypes” bearing the penciled label, ‘‘P. 
scaramuzzai n. sp.’’. All of the preceding specimens also bear a single ad- 
ditional label, ‘‘Monte”’. All of these are in the NCS collection except the 
holotype which is on indefinite loan to USNM. The holotype is a paratype of 
Poeciloscarta cardin Metcalf and Bruner, but is not conspecific with the 
holotype of the latter. The remaining “‘paratype” and ‘‘holotype”’ labels refer 
to a manuscript name. 
Three additional specimens are at hand from Somorrostro, Havana, Cuba 
(Scaramuzza and Bruner), two August 20, 1935 and one August 16, 1936 (all 
NCS); two specimens, San Carlos Est., Guantanamo, Cuba, October 4-8, 
1913 (AMNH). 
A. imitatrix, n. sp., is closely related to A. stali (Signoret) in the form of the 
male genitalia except the pygofer of which the concave posteroventral margin 
is distinctive for zmitatrix. Both species differ from all others in the genus in 
lacking aedeagal processes. 
Apogonalia pinguis, NEW SPECIES 
FIGURE 747, PAGE 924 
Length of male and female 7.2-7.3 mm. Head bluntly produced, with me- 
dian length of crown varying from slightly more than four-tenths to slightly 
more than one-half interocular width, and from slightly less than three-tenths 
to one-third transocular width; antennal ledges with anterior margins vertical 
and slightly concave in lateral view; clypeus broadly convex, not flattened 
