FULGOROIDEA OF TRINIDAD—FENNAH 449 
| granular, except at apex and on a small round spot on dorsal surface 
near base. Tegmina with commissural margin not excavated distad 
of apex of clavus. 
Vertex, genae below eyes, basal joint of antennae, basal part of 
clypeus, rostrum, posterior part of pronotum, mesonotum, pleurites, 
| legs, and genital styles pale yellow; genae before eyes, distal part of 
| clypeus, coxae, abdominal sclerites, anal segment, and pygofer pale 
fuscous; antennae dull yellow with a delicate piceous granulation; 
tegmina hyaline, clouded with fuscous, a series of six clear round spots 
on Sc+R, a spot on Sc beyond fork, followed distally by a large clear 
area extending across to R, three more spots before apical transverse 
vein, R with two clear spots near transverse vein, and an elongated 
spot basad of Sc+R fork, a large clear area over common stem at 
base of tegmina, M with four clear spots on basal third, three in apical 
third, six clear spots in basal third of Cu,, thence a spot at each veinal 
junction, a clear spot at junction of apical veins with margin; costal 
cell, transverse veins, and an oblique band near apex of clavus darker 
fuscous, veins mostly pale, anteroapical margin tinged reddish orange; 
wings hyaline, fuscous at base of anal area, veins fuscous. 
Anal segment of male deflexed through 30°4beyond anal opening, 
produced posteriorly into a narrow lobe. Pests with lateral margin 
broadly sinuate, devoid.of medioventral process. Aedeagus tubular, 
directed upward distally to a flattened lobe; a spine on left side ven- 
trally, directed anteriorly, a second spine, arising somewhat more 
dorsally, directed vertically then bent through 90° to point posteriorly ; 
two large spines directed anteriorly from apical lobe, the upper short, 
the lower three-quarters as long as aedeagus. Genital styles narrow 
at base, expanding to an almost quadrate lobe at apex, a vertical 
process on dorsal margin at middle bearing at its tip two spines, one 
directed inward, the other outward. 
Described from two males collected by the writer in St. John’s Valley, 
Trinidad, B. W. I. (July 27, 1942). Type, U.S.N.M. No. 56696. This 
species is distinguished by the clear spot at the base of the second 
segment of the antennae, by the structure of the genitalia, and by the 
color pattern of the tegmina. 
Family KINNARIDAE 
The possession of wax-secreting plates on the terga of the sixth, 
seventh, and eighth abdominal segments is not a family character, 
unless Prosotropis and allied genera be separated into another family. 
The writer at present recognizes two subfamilies: Krnnarrnag, includ- 
ing forms possessing such wax-bearing plates, and Prosorrop1ng, in- 
cluding forms with them reduced on the sixth tergite, obsolete on the 
seventh, and absent from the eighth. 
