CICADELLINAE: PART 2, NEW WORLD CICADELLINI 931 
one specimen (UCAL). MICHOACAN: Puente de Ixtla, July 4, 1900 (O. C. 
Deam), one specimen (USNM); 11 mi. e. of Apatzingan, August 20, 1954 
(Linsley, MacSwain and R. F. Smith), one specimen (UCAL); Zitacuaro, 
September 29, 1941 (DeLong, Good, Caldwell and Plummer), one specimen 
(OSU). COLIMA: Volcan (L. Conrad), one specimen (USNM); same 
locality, 1918 (John Lane), one specimen (SSM). DISTRITO FEDERAL: 
Real de Arriba, Temescaltepec, May 24, 1933 (R. L. Usinger), ten specimens; 
same locality, July 10, 1933 (H. E. Hinton and R. L. Usinger), one specimen; 
Tejupilco, Temescaltepec, June 17, 1933 (same collectors), one specimen; 
(UCAL). MORELOS: Cuernavaca, August 15, 1954 (R. R. Dreisbach), three 
specimens, (RD); same locality, June (collector unknown), five specimens, 
and June 16, 1898 (collector unknown), two specimens, and October 31, 1923 
(E. G. Smyth), one specimen; Acapulco Road, August 22, 1936, two 
specimens, August 23, 1936, two specimens, August 24, 1936, ten specimens, 
August 29, 1936 two specimens (all Ball and Stone) (USNM); near Tiyalpa, 
June 22 and 23, 1963 (R. E. Woodruff), 125 specimens (SPBF). PUEBLA: 
Puebla, May 28, 1922 (E. G. Smyth); one specimen (USNM). GUERRERO: 
Acapulco, August 20, 1936, two specimens, and August 24, 1936, one 
specimen (Ball and Stone) (USNM). VERA CRUZ: Orizaba, June (collec- 
tor?), one specimen (USNM); Fortin, June 25, 26, 27, 1963 (R. E. Woodruff), 
ten specimens (SPBF); Orizaba, 1897 (R. Oberthur), one specimen (USNM). 
CHIAPAS: near Los Amates, May 22, 1964 (F. S. Blanton and R. E. 
Woodruff), six specimens (SPBF). One additional specimen was intercepted 
from Mexico at Nogales, Arizona, July 14, 1936 on leaves of mango. Two 
specimens were also studied from the ““Department of Comayagua”’, May 29, 
1964 (F. S. Blanton, A. B. Broce, and R. W. Woodruff) (SPBF). The 
specimens collected by Woodruff, or Woodruff and others were taken with a 
black-light trap. 
A. krameri, n. sp., has been commonly misidentified as Tettigonia punctulata 
(Signoret), but the lectotype of the latter is not congeneric. A. krameri is 
readily separable from other species of the genus on the basis of the color pat- 
tern of the forewings in which markings are conspicuously absent in a 
longitudinal area on each side of vein M, but present on both sides of the un- 
marked area. In the male genitalia, the double apical pygofer process of which 
the rami extend across the median line, are distinctive. In a series from the 
Acapulco region, in the USNM, the pronotum is yellow behind the transverse 
sulcus. 
This species is named in honor of Dr. James P. Kramer, of the Systematic 
Entomology Laboratory of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Dr. Kramer 
has sacrificed a great deal of time in assisting with numerous technical 
problems related to this paper and in lending specimens under his care. 
Apogonalia dampfi, NEW SPECIES 
Figure 750, PAGE 928 
Length of male 8.4-10.4 mm, of female 9.1-9.3 mm. Head conically 
produced, with median length of crown varying from one-half or slightly less 
