424 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. — [Vol. XXXIV, 
margin at about the level of the mouth, and there are two pairs posteriorly, not far 
apart, at the sides of the abdominal region. Pygidial region with two pairs of lobes; 
median stout, trilobed, having two almost equal notches; second lobes prominent 
rounded projections, slightly shorter than the median lobes, and'some distance from 
them; between the median lobes, which are widely separated, is a pair of fringed 
plates or squames, much longer than the lobes; a large and long spine and two broad 
fringed plates laterad of each median lobe; a short fringed plate and a series of spine- 
Fig. 1. Schizaspis lobata. . 1A, caudal structures of adult female full of young; 1B, 
immature female: 1C, adult female; 1D, mouth parts of adult female. 
like ca laterad of the second lobes. Anal igen large, not far ies hind end; 
genital opening about as far cephalad of anal opening as that is of the bases of median 
lobes. A few transversely elongated dorsal pores, and near the margin some small 
circular orifices. Antenne with a single long bristle. 
Male scale nearly 1 mm. long, white, with yellow exuvia; margins convex. Los 
Bafios, Philippine Is., March 20, 1914 (C. F. Baker, 3110). Irregularly scattered in 
large numbers on sides side of leaves of Ficus nota. 
This could be regarded as an aberrant Diaspis, but it is little related to 
the type of that genus. The lobes, and large anal orifice near the hind end 
suggest Hemuberlesia; the large spine-like structures next to the median 
lobes, and the character of the dorsal glands of the pygidial area, rather 
remind one of Fiorinia. 
