EROTYLTD.E. 



SiiLfamily 1. Langurides. 



Pachylanguria. g. n. 



{Typ. Paiva^ WoU.) 



Antcnnjie short, reacliing to about one half the length of tlie 

 thorax, joints 2 — 7 thick, moniliform (the Srd a little longer than 

 the others), 8 — 1 1 compressed, dilated, ^^ubescent, closely adpressed 

 together, forming a club. 



Head with the eyes rather flat, extremely finely granulated; 

 frontal suture obsolete ; clypeus emarginate in front. 



Thorax broader than long; sides faintly margined; posterior 

 angles produced, acute ; base margined, angularly produced in 

 front of the scutellum and very gradually sloped towards the 

 angles; a short impressed line on each side at about one third. 



Elytra with the epi})leural fold not marked, the reflexed 

 portion sinuate ; seven distinct rows of punctures, leaving an 

 irregularly punctured space at the margin. 



Legs short; tarsi dilated; claw-joint long. 



Presternum with a broad, thickly margined process, deeply 

 emarginate at the apex, and not depressed. 



Mesosternum convex, apex emarginate ; coxal lines abbreviated 

 but visible. 



Pacliylanguria coUaris, sp. n. 



Subelongata, parallela, cyanea, thorace supra et subtus auran- 

 tiaco (prosterno apice nigro) ; elytris crebre punctulatis, regulariter 

 punctato-striatis. L. 3 lin. India (Bakewell). 



Closely allied to P. PaivcB, but narrower, the last three ventral 

 segments with a yellow spot at the sides, and the clypeus not 

 emarginate in front. In fully matured specimens the thorax 

 ■would probably be marked with black. 



Pachylanguria Paivse. .^<^x^t^~'^- ^ 



Languria Paivce, WoU. Ann. K II. iv. 430 (1859).o'^ O 

 JST. China. I 



