LONGICORN nOLEOPTERA FROM BURMA 11 



The third and fourth johits of the antennae are scarcely thickened 

 towards the apex ; tlie fourth is about equal in length to the first ; 

 the third and fifth are subequal, each a little longer than the fourth. 



23. Dymasius fulvescens, sp. n. {PL I, fuj. 2). Piceo- fuscus; ca- 

 pile, prothoracis maculis eiijtrisque pube fulm-grisea opaca sat dense 

 obteclis, prothorace quam latitudine longiori, supra intricato-rugoso, 

 lateraliter parum rotundato ; elytris postice gradatim anguslatis , 

 apicibus truncalisy ad sutiwam spinosis; carpare sublus, pedibus 

 a?itennisque griseo leviter pubescciitibus, a^itennis quam corpore panilo 

 longioribus, articulo 3° quam 4° fere duplo longiori, articulis a 

 5." ad 10."'" apice intas spinoso-productis. Long. 20 7nm. 



Hab. Garin (Ghecù) : Alt. 1300-1400 metres. One example. 



Pitchy brown. Head with a rather close fulvous grey pube- 

 scence, \vhich is wanting only in the somewhat circular depres- 

 sion limiting the ivonXoX plaque^ and in the short shallow groove 

 between the antennary tubers. Prothorax longer than broad, 

 slightly rounded at the sides, narrower in front than at the 

 base, intricately and rather strongly rugose above and at the 

 sides ; with a fulvous-grey pubescence limited to the anterior 

 border and to a few patches on the anterior part of the disk. 

 Scutellum and elytra clothed with a dense dull fulvous-grey 

 pubescence, which almost completely hides the underlying derm. 

 Elytra gradually narrowed from base to apex, each truncate 

 behind, and spinose at the suture. First joint of the posterior 

 tarsus as long as the two succeeding joints combined. 



Antennae (9?) surpassing the elytra by about the last two 

 joints ; the fourth joint perceptibly shorter than the scape, and 

 scarcely more than half the length of the third joint; with the 

 joints from the 5.*'^ to the 10.'^ spinosely produced at their 

 inner apex, each about equal in length to the ?>J^ ; 11.'^ scar- 

 cely longer than the 10.*'' 



24. Wlallambyx ? sp. 



Garin Mts., Asciuii Gheba. One imperfect example. 



As the antennae are wanting *it is impossible to refer this 

 species with certainty to any particular genus. It seems to me 

 to belong to Mallambyx or perhaps to a new genus. 



