Sp. 1. viridis . Supra lateribusque viridi-oenea, nitens, subtusJlavescens, pedibus luteis supra atris, stigmate rufo. (Long. corp. 17—18 lin.; Exp. Alar. 20— 21 lin.)
Ag. viridis . Van. Linden, p. 36.— Le. sponsa. Steph. Catal. 308. No. 3420.
Head bright brassy-green; mouth and beneath yellow; tips of the mandibles black; collar brassy-green, with the sides and a dorsal line yellow in the females; thorax above bright grassy-green, with three slender longitudinal yellow lines, the sides and space between the wings luteous-yellow; abdomen above and on the sides rich brassy-green, beneath yellowish, the extreme edge of most of the basal segments also yellowish; upper caudal appendage in the male luteous, the tip fuscous; lower fuscous; legs luteous, black above; wings with a red or fuscescent stigma.
Some examples are of a brighter and richer green than others, while some are bronzed.
Not uncommon in the New Forest in June and July; also found near Wanstead in Essex, and in the vicinity of Ripley, and in Suffolk.