520 H. S. GORHAM 



have their inner margin furnished with a row of fine long and 

 thick pubescence. 



It was met with at Ramoi and Fly River. 



E. resinatus Gorh. is allied to this species and perhaps not 

 distinct, but I have not seen the male, and it is from Borneo. 



5. £2. ang'ula.tus, Gorham. 



The front tibiae of the males have a small tooth near their 

 apex (cf. Endomycici Recitati, Tab. fig. 10). When I wrote the 

 description of E. angulatus I was under the impression that the 

 males of both species had toothed front tibiae. I am now of 

 opinion that this is only so in E. angulalus, wliicli has black 

 legs and the thorax evidently more narrowed behind , causing 

 the sides to appear more distinctly angulated than in the species 

 I now regard as E. immaculatus. 



E. ferialis, Gorh. is I now believe a variety of E. angulatus 

 in which the thorax is entirely black. This species was described 

 by me from a specimen from Geby one of the Moluccas. In 

 New Guinea it occurred at Ramoi, Goram (L. M. D'Albertis) Aru 

 Islands (Beccari); and the variety ferialis of which the type is 

 from Borneo, occurred at Fly River, New Guinea (L. M. D'Al- 

 bertis). 



6. Tryclxerus Raffjrayi. 



Niger, siibtus piceus, nitidus, prothorace mtra marginem utrmque 

 rufo, disco nigro-piceo^ elytris maculis duabus, anteriore lunulata^ 

 sanguineo-rufis , abdomine rufo-piceo. Long. 8 mill. 



Hah. Africa orientali, Zanzibar (Raffray). 

 Although a little resembling T. senegalensis this is a very distinct 

 and interesting species being the first record of the occurrence of 

 this genus on the East coast of Africa. The head and antennae 

 are very nearly the same as in T. senegalensis. The thorax is 

 also formed as in T. senegalensis but has the lateral margins 

 more thickened and flat. The elytra are proportionally more 



