496 M. JACOBY 



strongly transversely sulcate, the sides straight at the base, 

 rounded in front, the disc impunctate, Havous, scutellum flavous, 

 elytra not depressed below the base, llavous with two black 

 spots, one subquadrate at the base not quite touching the su- 

 ture, the other larger and of more rounded shape near the 

 apex, under side and legs flavous, the sides of the breast and 

 the abdomen black, the sides of each segment of the latter fla- 

 vous, the last segment of the male, deeply longitudinally sul- 

 cate, that of the female nearly truncate, pygidium black. 



Hah. Rigo, Ighibirei. 



Entirely resembling in coloration A. occipitalis Baly but se- 

 parated by the simple lower joints of the antennae which in the 

 other species are dilated, the same is the case in the male of 

 A. Olivieri Baly. 



34. ^^^iilaeoplioi^a coi-nuita Baly (nee robusta Duviv.). 



Paumomu Riv., Haveri, S. E. New Guinea; also Fergusson Isl. 

 (Meek), Arfak, New Guinea (my collection). 



The two specimens obtained by D.^' Loria belong to Baly's 

 variety in which the elytra are black or nearly so and nar- 

 rowly margined with fulvous. Baly has wrongly identified Du- 

 vivier's A. robusta (Notes Leyd. Mus. VI, p. 124) with his 

 (Baly's) .4. cornala; in regard to the tuberculate head and the 

 general coloration the two species are identical, but Duvivier 

 describes the thorax as punctured throughout, which is not the 

 case in Baly's species, nor are the elytra shining and strongly 

 punctured in rows as in .4. robusta, on the contrary, the elytra 

 are opaque and extremely minutely and closely punctate in 

 A. cornuta. 



35. ^S^ulenia divisa, sp. n. 



Black, thorax flavous, impunctate, elytra finely and closely 

 punctured, the basal two thirds flavous, the apical one, black. 

 Length 8 millim. 



