EUOMEOEBIIINA. — ELTIILOROPUS. 80 



widening towards the front, with the anterior and lateral margins 

 nearly straight. The iwotliorax is rather shorter relatively than 

 in 11. f/Jabernina and mearesi, \\ith the sides a little more distinctly 

 augiilated in the middle and the hase strongly trisinuated ; the 

 l^uncturation very coarse and rugose at the sides but becoming 

 very fine in the middle. The elytra are finely and shallowly, but 

 rather closely, strigosely punctured, some of the punctures forming 

 rows anteriorly, the apical and posterior lateral margins are 

 coarsely strigose, but scarcely hairy, and the apical angles are 

 slightly pi'oduced. The 2\>/gidrain is densely rugose and clothed 

 with short, not closely-set setje. The sternal process is moderately 

 long, blunt and not much curved. The metasternum is densely 

 punctured and pubescent laterally, but smooth and deeply grooved 

 in the middle, and the abdomen is almost smooth. 



(S . The form is more elongate, the prothorax more narro^^■ed 

 in front, the autennal club long, the hind tibia thickly fringed, 

 and the abdomen deeply channelled beneath. 



Length 22 mm.: hreadth 10-11 mm. 



Assam : Manipur. 



Type in the British Museum. 



Genus EUCHLOROPUS. 



Eucliloropus, Arrow, Ann. May. Nat. Hist. (7) xix, 1907, pii. 3-jC) 

 & 4.33. 



Type, Cetonia lo'ta, Y. 



lianr/e. That of the type species. 



leather compact in shape, with the legs stout. Clypeus shorr, 

 and rectangular, with the margins simple, straight and reflexed. 

 Sternal process long and slender, curved and sharply pointed at 

 the end. Club of the antenna very short in both sexes. Elytra 

 deeply striated. 



S . Eront tibi;e slender and simple. Hind femora thickened 

 and curved ; tibite attenuated and strongly curved at the base, and 

 furnished at the inner edge with a thick fringe of yellow hairs. 

 Abdomen arched but not ciiannelled beneath. 



§ . Front tibife broad and bidentate. Hind legs simple. All 

 the tarsi shorter than those of the male. 



Only a single species is known. 



(12. Euchloropiis Isetus. 



Cetonia heta, F., Syst. Fleut. ii, 1801, p. 150. 



Gnathocera lasta, G. i)- P., Motioyr. Cet. 1833, p. 135, pi. 20, fig. 6. 

 Hetei'orrliina la^ta, Westw., Arcama Ent. i, 1842, p. 137, pi. 34, tig. 2. 

 Heterorrhina sylbetica, Thorns.,^' Mus. Scient. 1860, i. p. 30; 



Gestro, Ann.' Mug. Civ. Genora, 1888, p. 98; id., op. cit. 1891, 



p. 839 (n. syu.). 



Bright emerald-green above and below, including the legs and 



