140 ANISOLEMNIA. 



Anisocalvia flaccida. 



Ccdviafaccida, Muls. Op. in. p. 23 (1853) T. 



Immature and difficult to determine with accuracy, but evi- 

 dently a variety of one of the preceding pale-coloured species. 

 N. India (Deyrolle). 



Anisocalvia Sykesii, sp. n. 



Ovate convex, almost gibbous, pale reddish ochreous ; thorax 

 alutaceous, closely punctate, sides broadly whitish, disc with an 

 irregular M in brownish red, the outside strokes being the borders 

 of the white marks ; elytra greenish ochreous tinged with red 

 along the suture, punctuation distinct, very unequal, each with 

 three very small black dots (one near the margin at one-third, one 

 nearer the suture in a transverse line with the first, one also near 

 the mai"gin at two-thirds). L. 3 lin. Dukhun (India Mus.). This 

 is more convex than the other species, but has the long antennae, 

 emarginate mesosternum, unequal punctuation, etc. 



Sphseroneda. 



Crotch, Cat. Cocc. p. 6 (ti/p. Sinopaa). 



Antennae long, club lax, three-jointed, dentate within. Meso- 

 sternum emarginate, elytra margined. 



Sphseroneda Sinopse. 



Daulis Sinopce, Muls. Spec. p. 213. 8. 



Sub-hemispherical, tolerably closely punctate, thickly aluta- 

 ceous, orange red ; thorax with the sides broadly ochreous, this 

 colour bordered on the inside with blackish; elytra with a spot on 

 the callus, and a cross reticulation black, consisting of a fascia 

 before the middle and one at two-thirds connected by a short 

 longitudinal line, leaving three round orange spots ; the anterior 

 fascia is dilated on the suture. L. 2| lin. Celebes (Deyrolle), 

 Macassar (Wallace). 



Anisolemnia. 



gen. nov. (typ. complicata). 



Metasternum slightly, mesosternum deeply emarginate, ele- 

 vated, strigosely punctate; elytra margined, epipleurse foveolate. 

 Malay Archipelago. 



The punctuation of the elytra is more or less unequal. 



Anisoleinnia complicata, sp. n. 



Ochreous yellow, elytra with a sinuous narrow branched black 

 line, apparently the remains of a reticulate pattern. It starts 

 from the callus, giving off a short branch at right angles to the 



