80 



This is the third species of this genus known to me, 

 agreeing with the others in all structural details, the most 

 important of whicli ave the biiid claws, the long antennae 

 and the transveipe thorax; three specimens ave contained in 

 my eollection, 



Coeligethes unicolor n. sp. 



Eiongate, eonvex, eotireh" tebtaceous, the apii-al joiuts of 

 llie antennae piceous, thorax impunetate, elytra distiuctly and 

 irreoularly punctured. 



Length 4 — 6 iines. 



(^. Entirel}^ flavous, the head impunetate, with a fovea 

 between the eyes, the latter very large, the space dividing 

 them, smaller than their diameler, clypeus triangulär, strongi}' 

 raised, palpi thickened, antennae very long and slender, 

 Havous, the apical three joints black, the second Joint small, 

 third Joint more than twice the length of the preceding one, 

 fourth Joint one lialf longer than the third, all the ibllowing 

 joints ver}' eiongate and slender, i)ubescent, thorax short, 

 parallel, more than twice as broad as long, the sides slightly 

 rounded, the angles obtuse, the .surface impunetate, elytra 

 linely and rather closely punctured witli some larger punc- 

 hires intermixed, the interstices smooth and shining, their 

 epipleurae extending below the middle, tibiae unarmed, the 

 first Joint of the posterior tarsi longer than the following 

 joints together, claws appendiculate, anterior coxal cavities 

 closed; the last segment of the abdomen trilobate, the median 

 lobe longitudinally sulcate. 



Hab. Java, (Fruhstorfer). 



There are now three species of this genus (deseribed by 

 me in the Leyden Museum Notes 1884) known to me; one 

 of them is C. robustus Allard Cplaced erroneously in Steno- 

 plalys); the present species is of very eiongate and almost 

 ugly shape, the female being of much larger and more 

 robust size. 



Stett. enioniül Zeit. 1895. 



