LONGICORN COLEOPTERA FROM BURMA 53 



each tibia black. Antennae (c^) about half as long again as the 

 body, shortly and thickly ciliate below, black, with the scape 

 slightly, the bases of the joints from the third to the sixth, and 

 the tip of the last joint pale grey; third joint slightly longer 

 than the first or fourth. 



128. Agelasta mixta, sp. ri. Brunnescente-pubescms, capite pro- 

 thoraceque nigro-oiUatis; elytris nigro cinereoque vnaciUatis et nigro- 

 punctaliSj punclis praecipue versus basin in seriebus long iludinali bus 

 aggregatis, corpore sublus pedibusque fulvo-brunneo-pabescentibus, 

 femoribus sparsim nigro-punctatis, tibiis apice nigris; anlennis 

 griseo-brunnescentibus, arliculis 3° ad 6""^ apice^ el 7° ad lO"'" 

 totis nigro-fuscis. Long. 17-18 mm. 



Oarin Mts. (Gheba district). 



Prothorax with two feeble nearly obsolete tubercles on each 

 side , one at the middle , the other a little behind the anterior 

 margin. Third joint of the antennae distinctly longer than the 

 first or fourth. Prosternai process strongly enough arched and 

 rounded in the middle , vertical behind. Mesosternal process 

 vertical in front, horizontal below, feebly tubercled at its antero- 

 inferior edge. 



This species seems nearly enough allied to the preceding, 

 but may be easily distinguished by the general brownish tone 

 of colour of its pubescence, the fewer black spots on the elytra, 

 and the presence of three ashy spots along the suture and some 

 scattered spots on each elytron. The black bands of the head 

 and prothorax are disposed in very much the same manner as 

 in C. nigromaculata , the black points on the elytra are more 

 numerous, and arranged, especially towards the base, in some- 

 what irregular longitudinal series. 



The two species just described agree with A. transversa, Newm. 

 — the type of the genus — in the relative proportions of the 

 joints of the antennae, in the shape and tuberculation of the 

 prothorax, and of the pro-and mesosternal processes ; they agree, 

 in fact, in all essential points of structure. Their relatively nar- 

 rower elytra, however, give them an appearance more resem- 

 bling the species of Coptops; but from the more typical species 



