I9I4-] F. H. Gravely : An Account of the Oriental Passalidae. 297 



Malay Peninsula : Johore. 

 Sumatran Islands: Nias— Ombolata. 



Sumatra — Deli. 

 Java: Buitenzorg. 

 S. E. Borneo. 



Philippine Islands : S. Palawan. 

 Molucca (? = Malacca). 



Subfamily GNAPHALOCNEMINAE. 

 The principal home of this sub-family is in the islands east of Wallace's Line ; 

 but certain species are found further west, one or two getting as far as Southern 



Burma. 



Genus PARAPELOPIDES, Zang 



Parapelopides symmetricus, Zang. 



Parapelopidcs ■fsyynmetriciis, Zang, 1904(7., pp. 695-7, fi^s. 1-2. 



Parapelopides symmetricus, Zang, 1905a, p. 189. 



Parapelopides -f symmetricus, Gravely, above, pp. 246-247, text-fig. bA-B. 



Locality : — 



Borneo: Mt. Kina-Balu, c 5000 ft. 



Genus TRAPEZOCHILUS, Zang, 1905. 

 = Eriocnemis [part], Kaup, 1871 ; = Phraortes, Kuwert, 1898. 

 The genus Trapezochilus occurs in Sumatra, the Malay Peninsula, and the 

 extreme south of Burma. 



Trapezochilus dorsalis (Kaup). 



Eriocnemis ■\dorsalis, Kaup, 1871, p. 41. 

 (Eriocnemis dorsalis, Wytsman, 1884, p. 334.) 

 (Eriocnemis Dorsalis, Kuwert, 1891, p. 168.) 



Eriocnemis dorsalis + Phraortes generosus + respectabilis, + nobilis, Kuwert, 1898, pp. 323 



& 326. 

 Trapezochilus f nobilis + f respectabilis. Gravely, above, pp. 247-248, text-fig. 5C-E, pi. xiu, 



fig. 48, 

 The two specimens of this species in the Indian Museum collection, and also those 

 examined later in Europe, seem to indicate the identity of generosus and nobilis, 

 Kuwert. One of the two Indian Museum specimens has six distinct antennal lamellae, 

 though one of them is very small ; but in the other (the one figured) the anterior face 

 of the fifth joint bears only a swelling whose proximal face is steeper than its distal 

 one. This fact, and doubt as to the locality of the type of T. generosus,' has led me 

 to use the name nobilis in part 4 of this paper in preference to generosus, although 

 the original description of the latter precedes that of the former by a few lines. Since 

 that part of the paper went to press I have examined a fine series of specimens from 

 four localities in the Malay Peninsula, submitted to me through the kindness of P rof. 

 I Kuwert states that he had only one specimen of T. generosus, but gives both Perak and Sumatra 

 as its localities. 



