306 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on some new Coleoptera 



lineisque arcuatis duabus apicalibus CEenileo-viridibus. Long. corp. 3^ 

 — 4| lin. ; lat. 1^ — l^- lin. 



This pretty little species varies considerably in size, as will be seen 

 by the above dimensions. The rostrum is separated from the head 

 by a very deep transverse impression, and has a distinct longitudi- 

 nally impressed line ; in front it is convex, and rather thickly though 

 finely punctured. The head is very sparingly punctured ; the thorax 

 is subglobose and rather small ; its surface is glossy and is very de- 

 licately punctured ; the margins are adorned with blue-green scales. 

 The elytra are convex, of an ovate form, and nearly twice as broad 

 as the thorax, distinctly punctato- striated : at the base of each ely- 

 tron is a transverse narrow blue-green band, on the middle is a se- 

 cond band, and behind is a longitudinal mark running parallel with 

 and at a short distance from the suture ; joining this mark with the 

 central transverse fascia is a curved line which runs nearly parallel 

 with the outer margin of the elytron ; in the area enclosed by the 

 markings last described is a small round spot. The glossiness and 

 smoothness of the thorax will serve to distinguish the present species 

 from all others of the genus here described, excepting the Ap. metal- 

 licus, which greatly resembles the A. Icevicollis, not only in this cha- 

 racter, but in size, form, and also in the sculpturing of the elytra : 

 this however appears to be less strongly marked in the present than 

 in the preceding species. 



Apoayrtus elegans. 



Ap. niger ; rostro supr^ concavo ; capite punctato, antice linea transversa 

 impresso, et inter oculos stria longitudinali ; thorace subgloboso, tuberculis 

 crebris parum elevatis obsito, supra macuHs duabus, antice et ad latera, 

 squamis aureo-viridibus ornato ; elytris subseriatim punctatis, macuHs or- 

 natis, his maculis, lateribusque elytrorum, aureo-viridibus. Long. corp. 

 5^ lin. ; lat. 2^ lin. 



Rather less than the Pachyrhynchus moniliferus; the thorax smaller, 

 and the elytra proportionately more elongated. In size and disposition 

 of the markings the present species resembles the Ap. gihbirostris ; 

 but in that species the thorax and elytra are very nearly equal in 

 width, whilst in the A. elegans the thorax is considerably narrower 

 than the elytra : here the upper surface is covered with glossy tu- 

 bercles, and there is a somewhat indistinct dorsal channel; in Ap. 

 gihbirostris the thorax is coarsely punctured above. 



The rostrum is concave above, rather finely punctured, and sepa- 

 rated from the head by a transverse groove : the head presents largish 

 scattered punctures between the eyes, and has a longitudinally im- 

 pressed line in the same part ; beneath the eye is a small brilliant ' 

 spot. The thorax is subcyHndrical, but dilated in the middle ; the 

 anterior part is narrowly margined with brilliant scales, and there is 

 a broad patch of these scales on each side, besides two smallish round 

 spots on the upper surface : these are widely separated and situated 

 not far from the hinder margin. The elytra present a nearly ovate 

 outhne, but are somewhat pointed behind ; they are distinctly punc- 

 tured, and the punctures have a tendency to form themselves into 

 lines. At the base of each elytron are two roundish spots of mode- 



