278 Memoirs of the Indian Museum. | Vol. Ill, 



Ceracupes ffronticornis [ ? part], Zang, igo^a, p. 100. ' 

 CeratocHpes fronticornis, Arrow, 1907, p. 444. 

 Ceracupes f fronlicornis, Gravely, above, p. 212, pi. xi, lig. 12. 

 Zang refers Fruhstorfer's Nigidius-like Passalid from Ke-Lung in Formosa 

 (Fruhstorfer, 1902, p. 28) to this species; but Heller has since described a Formosan 

 form under a separate specific name, and it is therefore probable that it is really to 

 this species that Fruhstorfer's specimens belong 

 Localities: — 



K. Himalayas: Nepal. 



Darjeeling District — Gopaldhara, Rungbong \'alley. 

 Tibet. 

 Tonkin : Mt. Mauson 2000-3000 ft. ; Thau Moi. 

 Burma : Ruby Mines '. 



Bhamo^Sin Lum ". 

 Stoliczka remarks: " It must come from the Chinese portion of eastern Tibet, for 

 western Tibet has no forests." 



The specimen from Than Moi (whose altitude above sea level is not, Dr. Horn 

 informs me, very great) is in the Deutsches Eutomolgisches Museum. Its horn is 

 more slender and more strongly widened and turned up at the end, and its elytra 

 are less strongly punctured than in the specimens I have seen from higher altitudes 

 in the Darjeeling District and Mt. Mauson; but I do not feel justified in describing 

 it as a new species or variety without seeing longer series of specimens from all three 

 localities. 



Ceracupes arrowi, Heller. 



* ? Fruhstorfer, 1902, p. 28. 

 ? Ceracupes fronlicornis [part], Zang, 19051?, p. 100. 



Ceracupes Arrowi, Heller, 1911, pp. 256-7, text-fig. 



Ceracupes ■\ arrowi, Gravely, 1914a, p. 31. 

 Localities: — 



Fomosa: Kosempo ; Hoozan;? Ke-Lung. 



Ceracupes austeni, Stoliczka. 



Ceracupes ^austeni, Stoliczka, 1873, p. 151. 

 {Ceracupes Ausfeni, Wytsman, 1884, p. 329.) 

 {Ceracupes Austeni, Kuwert, 1891, p. 171 ) 



Ceracupes austeni, Kuwert, 1897, p. 274 



Ceracupes f austeni. Gravely, above, pp. 212-213, pi. xi, figs. it-iiK 



Localities: — 



E. Himalayas: Dafla Expedition, Camp 9; Dikrang Valley. 

 Naga Hills: Manipur and an unrecorded locality at an altitude of about 6000 

 ft. above sea level. 



' Fruhstorfer has apparently referred to the species in a price-list under the name Ceratocupes 

 cornuttts (see Zang, loo. cit.). 



^ These records are based on specimens in the British Museum. 



