266 H. S. GORIIAM 



Var. ehjtris suhcyanek. 



lldh. Tenasserim, Thagatà. 



This species is very close to L. coarclala. Crotch. 



The liead and thorax are excee(hngly finely punctured, the 

 abdomen is i)lack and shining, no ab:loniinal lines properly so 

 called exist, but the intercoxal process of the first ventral seg- 

 ment is deeply margined. 



11. Caenolanguria constricta, n. sp. 



Sitji'd, jinit/tunicc riifo, Ixisl nitji'o, convexo, posdcc ixiide con- 

 slriclOj pedibm /<)H(jis; capile minutissime disperse pwiclato, ociilis 

 hand grosse ijraniUalis; elylris niyris lonyis , apice m versus yra- 

 dalim attemmlisj, sahtiiiler punclo-iinealis, punctis liuearibus; inter- 

 stiliis laevibus, planis. Long. 1) iniUim. 



J fab. Burma, Garin Chel)à. 



Yery narrow, and slenderly Ijuilt, and rather depressed, the 

 head under the Coddington quite distinctly l)ut finely punctured, 

 the eyes prominent, fine. The thorax swells from the front 

 angles rather suddenly; past the middle it is contracted in a 

 cordate manner, the base being wider than it is a little higher 

 up. It is quite smooth except across the black part of the base, 

 where scattered }iunctures of a fiiir size appear. It is longer than 

 wide. The elytra and scutellum are cjuite black. The suturai 

 stria is impressed throughout the length , the following seven 

 rows of linear punctures are neatly impressed, without striae, 

 running close to the tip, where they coalesce, and become eva- 

 nescent. The a])ices are quite simple. 



Underneath the puncturing is very line, l)ut evenly ilistributed. 

 There are no abdominal lines. 



The legs are long and the femora thin, the tarsi are long, 

 and hardly widened. 



'idu!re is only one example. 



Tliis species is a narrow elegant insect, dilfering therefore 

 considerably from any I have yet placed in the giMUis. It sliould 

 be easily recognised IVom ihc coloni-, ami form. 1 have no clue 

 at present as to the sex. 



