122 Records of the Indian Museum. [Vol. VIII , 



Apobletes tener, Mars. 



Mars., Mon., i860, p. 859, t. 15, f. 5. 



Sadi3'a (N.-E. Assam), under bark. Only one damaged 

 example. 



Occurs in India, the Malayan Archipelago and the Philippine 

 Islands. 



Apobletes planidorsum, Bickh. 



Bickh. , Tijdschrift v. Entomol., Iv, 1912, p. 219. 



Sadiya (N.-E. Assam), under bark. One example. 



This species differs from A. macilentus , Lew., in the lateral 

 stria of the pronotum. In A. macilentus this stria leaves the 

 margin at the anterior angle, cutting off a triangular space ; in 

 .4. planidorsum the lateral stria is continued along the margin 

 anteriorl}^ and reaches the anterior edge rectangularly. 



A. planidorsum was hitherto only known from Borneo. 



Liopygus famelicus, Lew. 



Lew., Ann. Mus. Genova (2), xii, 1891, p. 21. 



Sukli, E. side of Dawna Hills, L. Burma, 2100 ft. One 

 example. 



Also reported b}^ Lewis from Burma. 



Platysoma (Platylister) cambodjensis, Mars. 



Mars., Abeille, i, 1864, p. 300. 



Kobo, 400 ft., Rotung, 1400 ft., Sadiya (N.-E. Assam), Thin- 

 gannyinaung to Sukli, Dawna Hills, 900-2100 ft. 



Man^'' examples collected by the Abor Expedition do not 

 agree exactly with Marseul's description. The lateral stria of the 

 pronotum is distinctly interrupted in many specimens, whilst 

 Marseul's type and the examples in my collection from Formosa, 

 Burma and India, have a well defined complete lateral stria. But 

 there is no other difference between the specimens collected by 

 the Abor Expedition and the others. I therefore prefer to esti- 

 mate this form as a variation without giving a new name to it. 



Occurs in India, Burma, Andaman Islands and Formosa. 



Platysoma (Platylister) odiosum, Mars. 



Mars., Mon., 1861, p. 145, t. 3, f. 5.— Mars., Ann. Soc. Ent. 

 Belg., xiii, 1870, p. 70. — (marseuli), Cand., Mem. Liege, 

 xvi, 1861, p. 336, t. I, f. ^.—{dissimile) , Motsch., Bull. 

 Mosc, xxxvi, 1863, ii, p. 451). 



Rotung, 1400 ft., Sadiya (N.-E. Assam), in rotten wood. 

 Occurs in India, Burma and Ceylon. 



