182 AUSTRALIAN PSELAPHIDjE, 



9 paulo majori, transverso, 10 majori, transverso, 1 1 magno, ovato. 

 Prothorax breviter cordatus, lateribus rotundatis. Elytra convexa, 

 lateribus rotundata. Metasternum simplex, subconvexam, seg- 

 mento 2° ventrali punctato. 9. Long. 1*10 mm. 



Clarence River, N.S.W. (Mr. A. ML Lea). 



I have not seen the g of this species, which will be very easily 

 distinguished b} T the size of the head and the last joint of the 

 antennae, which is abruptly larger, the club appearing as being 

 formed by one joint only. 



Eu PINES CAPJTATA, King. 



Trans. Ent. N.S.W. i 1866, p. 311. 



I have two specimens answering pretty well to King's de- 

 scription, more especially on account of the marked transverse line 

 of the frontal part, above the insertion of the antennae which are 

 themselves short and thick, the joints 4-9 being transversely 

 moniliform, 9 not larger than the preceding, whilst 10 is much 

 larger, transverse, 11 truncate at base and briefly ovate; the elytra 

 are rather elongate, attenuate at base, with the sides rounded and 

 the shoulders prominent and carinate; the scattered punctuation 

 is hardly visible, but still it exists; the metasternum and base of 

 the second ventral segment (first visible) are finely and rugosely 

 punctate; the tibiae are thickened from the middle part to the apex. 

 The £ is not known, and in the 9 the metasternum is hardly 

 impressed longitudinally. 



It is very different from megacephala by the smaller head and 

 the thicker antenna?. 



Mr. A. Lea sent me a specimen from Windsor, and I have 

 found another in Schaufuss' collection under the unpublished 

 name of similis. 



EUPINES LONGICORNIS, n.Sp. 



Oblonga, rufo-castanea, antennarum articulis 1-2 rufis, ultimo 

 testaceo, caeteris piceis, pedibus rufis, sat longe sed parce setosa. 

 Caput magnum, latitudine sua longius, lateribus rectis, angulis 



