19, 5 Heller: New Philippine Coleoptera 613 
Unicolored ashy gray with a distinctly shining, black, granu- 
late thorax, a stripe on each side of disk nearly without granules; 
antennz dark reddish brown, first and second joints of funicle 
nearly equal in length, seventh subconical, as long as broad; 
scutellum like elytra, gray scaled; elytra on suture and intervals 
uniseriate granulate, the granules on first interval in groups, 
each distant from the other by scarcely its diameter; below 
isabelline-colored scales; intermediate and posterior tibiz with 
a black setose dot on outside of apex, front femora inside with 
a fairly distinct carinula. This species is similar to the follow- 
ing one, but is distinguished by the different granulation and 
the scutellum, which is not pure white scaled. 
Odosyllis alboscutellaris sp. nov. 
Unicolor ochraceo-, subter plus isabellino-, scutello, rotundato, 
niveo-squamosis; rostro nigro, subtiliter, basi fortius punctato 
ac hic squamoso, antennis funiculi articulo tres ultimis longitu- 
dine latitudine fere aequalibus; elytris apice haud mucronatis, 
spatiis seriato-granulatis, granulis in spatii 6. et 7. dimidia parte 
posteriore oblongis, in spatii septimi, tertia quarta granulis 
approximatis, distantia inter haec longitudine aequalibus. 
Long. 6 mm., lat. 3. 
Luzon, Laguna Province, Mount Maquiling. 
Unicolored pale ochraceous, below isabelline colored, the 
roundish scutellum snow-white scaled; rostrum black, finely and 
remotely punctate, toward base more coarsely so, and there scaled, 
with a bare dorsal carina, reaching upward to anterior border 
of eye; antenne fulvous, club blackish, first joint of funicle 
hardly longer than second, the last three joints nearly as long as 
thick; prothorax transverse, the basal two-thirds of sides 
rounded, above remotely black granulate; elytra not produced 
at apex, the intervals remotely seriate granulate, first to third 
intervals at base with larger, roundish, marginal granules; 
seventh to ninth in posterior half with oblong granules, which in 
the third quarter of the seventh interval are so close together 
that the space between them is hardly as long as a single granule; 
scaling of underside mixed with remote, longer, and paler scale 
bristles. 
Key to the species of Odosyllis.” 
a’. Strie of elytra, at least in apical half, as broad as the carinate intervals. 
"The species atomaria, vitiosa, granulicollis, terrena, irrorata, ingeus, 
and gemmato of Pascoe I know only from the descriptions. 
