ART. 22 NEW CERAMBYCID BEETLES FISHEEt 17 



each other on the top by about three times the width of the upper 

 lobe. Antenna slender, about one and one-half times as long as the 

 body, three or four basal joints sparsely punctate (first joint scab- 

 rous) , sparsely clothed with short, white hairs, with numerous long, 

 erect hairs intermixed, following joints finely, densely punctate, and 

 densely clothed with very short, recumbent pubescence; first joint 

 robust, slightly flattened on top, strongly clavate, and about one- 

 half as long as the third joint, which is slightly longer than the 

 fourth; joints 4 to 10 subequal in length; eleventh joint dis- 

 tinctly longer than tenth. 



Pronotum vaguely wider than long, and about equal in width at 

 base and apex ; sides strongly sinuate, strongly, arcuately constricted 

 near posterior angles, and armed on each side at middle with a 

 vague, broadly obtuse tubercle of the same color as rest of surface, 

 and a smaller callosity of the same color between the tubercle and 

 the apical angle ; disk uneven, ornamented with two elongate, black 

 tubercles in front of middle ; surface rather finely, confluently punc- 

 tate or scabrous, and sparsely clothed with short, inconspicuous 

 hairs. Scutellum broadly triangular, curvilinear, and sparsely 

 clothed with short, inconspicuous hairs. 



Elytra at base slightly wider than pronotum at middle; humeri 

 prominent and strongly elevated; sides nearly parallel from base 

 to apical fourth, then arcuately narrowed to the tips, which are 

 separately, obliquely truncate, with a small spine at the sutural 

 angle; surface rather strongly convex, rather coarsely, confluently 

 punctate, with numerous distinct granular elevations in the sutural 

 regions, and sparsely clothed with short, inconspicuous hairs; each 

 elytron ornamented with two pairs of small, oval, widely separated, 

 eburneous spots, inner spot of basal pair slightly wider and longer 

 than outer one, and inner spot of median pair in advance of the 

 outer spot. 



Body beneath finely, densely punctate, and densely clothed with 

 moderately long, recumbent, inconspicuous hairs. Middle and 

 posterior femora unispinose. 



Fevmle. — Differs from the male in having the antenna about as 

 long as the body, the joints becoming gradually shorter toward the 

 tip, and the eleventh joint subequal in length to the tenth. 



Length, 10-19 mm. ; width, 2.75-5 mm. 



T^jfe locality. — Baragua, Cuba. 



Other localities.— Central Constancia, Guantanamo, and Central 

 Jaronu, Cuba. 



Type, allotype, and paratypes. — U.S.N.M. No. 43712. 



Paratypes. — In American Museum of Natural History and in S. C. 

 Bruner collection. 

 97806—32 2 



