568 NEAV 8pp:cies of Australian coleoptera, xiii., 



Notes on Table. 



c. F. ith/ff is placed here with hesitation, as the medio-basal 

 depression is less triangular than in F. hfemor7'hoidalis, and the 

 posterior bounding lines are more obtuse and less straight. 



F. caimliculatus was not included in the table, owing to the 

 broken antenna? of the type; but it would probably be associated 

 with F. hilaris. 



DOHRNIA UNDULATICOLLIS, n.sp. 



$. Black, front of head (except labrum) and its undersurface 

 except behind eyes), prothorax, most of legs, and parts of antenntv 

 and palpi Havous. Densely clothed with pale, depressed pubes- 

 cence; less conspicuous on head and prothoi-ax than elsewhere. 



Head gently convex towards base, and obliquely flattened in 

 front; with dense and small, but rather sharply defined punc- 

 tures. Eyes large, prominent, and entire. Antenna? rather 

 long and thin, eleventh joint slightly longer than tenth, and 

 feebly semi-double. Frothorax distinctly transverse, sides moder- 

 ately dilated towards apex, apex gently rounded, base bilobed 

 and narrowly upturned; with a wide, transverse depression near 

 apex, a smaller medio-basal depression, and a shallow impression 

 on each side about the middle; with very small punctures. Elytra 

 nuich wider than prothorax, parallel-sided to near apex; each 

 with two, feeble, discal costte; punctures crowded and small, but 

 sharply defined. Tip of abdovien triangularly notched. Lega 

 rather long and thin; claws each with a small but distinct basal 

 swelling. Length ((J 9)? ^''^2 '^^^^^• 



9. Difl'ers in being somewhat wider, eyes rather less prominent, 

 antennte and legs a little shorter, and abdomen not notched. 



J/ab.—N.^^AW : Blackheath (G. Masters), Jenolan (J. C. 

 AV'iburd), National Park (A. M. Lea). — Victoria (H. J. Carter). 



In general appearance very close to J), bifovpicollis, and with 

 the labrum quite as conspicuously black, but the prothorax with 

 a transverse impression covering the whole of the space near the 

 apex, instead of with two, large, disconnected excavations. The 

 eight apical joints of the antennte are narrowly flavous at base, 



