218 RUTELTK,^. 



Leni/th, 10-11 niiii. : breadth, 6 nini. 



Burma : Pegu (Indian Museum), Tenasserim. 



This species has an extraordinary superficial resemblance to 

 A. dec'qnens, Arr., from which it differs in important structural 

 details. 



223. Anomala auripennis. 



A7ionial(t aiiiipemds, Arrow, Ann. Mau'. Nat. Hist. (8) ix, 1912, 

 p. ooO. 



Pale yellow, entirely suffused with a rosy or greenish-golden 

 tinge, the head, pronotum (except the pale lateral margins), hind 

 tibiae and all the tarsi deep coppery-green. 



It is ovate, short or modei-ately long, convex and only slightly 

 shining. The head and pronotum are very closely punctured all 

 over, the elypeus rugose and broadly rounded. The prothorax is 

 not nuirgined at tiie base, the sides are scarcely rounded, but 

 slightly angulated betore the middle, with the front angles almost 

 right angles and the hind ones well marked but obtuse. The 

 scutellum is well punctured, except at the sides. The elytra are 

 minutely punctured all over, with larger punctures between ; the 

 latter form a sutural and two paired dorsal rows, the subsutural 

 interval being very broad and coarsely punctured. The pygidium 

 is finely transversely strigose. The sternum is moderately thickly 

 clothed with soft yellowish pubescence. There is no mesosternal 

 pi'ocess. The front tibia is bidentate, and the larger claw of the 

 front and middle tarsi cleft. The antennae are i-ather long, 

 and the 5th joint is equal in length to the two precednig joints 

 together. 



6 . The club is as long as the remainder of the antenna, the 

 front tibial teeth are very short, and the hind tibia is slender. 



$ . The body is more elongate, the antennal club moderately 

 long, the terminal tooth of the front tibia is long and clavate, and 

 the hind tibia is short and stout. 



Ltmjth, 13-18 mm.; breadth, 8-9-5 mm. 



Buema: Euby Mines (TF^. Dolurty), Karen Ghecu, 3900-4200 ft. 

 (X. Fea, Eeb., March), Plapu {L. Pea, April), Muleyit, 3000- 

 3900 ft. (April), Pokokku (Mss Mohswortl,). 



Type in the British Museum ; co-types in the Genoa Museum. 



This rather resembles the Japanese A. hicens, Ball., and some 

 varieties of the European A. cenen, Deg., but it is sharply distin- 

 guished from those, as from nearly all other species of the genus, 

 by the length of the 5th joint of the antenna. 



224. Anomala shanica, sp. nov. (Plate lY, tig. 10.) 



Deep coppery green, with the femora and antennae reddish, and 

 strongly metallic above and beneath. 



Oval in shape, convex and not very shining above, and clothed 

 bpne:!tli with short but rather thick greyish hair. The upper 



