536 Records of the Indian Museum. [Vol,. VIII, 19 15.] 



nounced, the punctures themselves being coarser, and the fine hair- 

 bearing punctures on the intervening ridges confined to numerous 

 small scattered patches. 



The plates of the lower surface are more strongly punctured 

 and hairy than in C. westermanni, as well as being greener in 

 colour like the dorsal surface. Otherwise they are alike in the two 

 species. 



The antennae of the female are very broad and flat distally. 

 The widening commences at the fifth joint, which is nearly half as 

 wide distally as it is long. The sixth and seventh joints are suc- 

 cessively shorter and broader; the eighth, ninth and tenth, which 

 are shorter and broader still, are each about as wide distally as 

 they are long. The apical joint is of about the same length but is 

 a little narrower and is pointed at the apex. 



The antennae of the male are broken, but the basal joints 

 are slenderer, and the widening is scarcely recognizable before the 

 sixth joint. 



The legs resemble those of S. westermanni except in their 

 greener colour, stronger puncturing, and decumbent hair, and in 

 the fact that the anterior tibiae of the male are somewhat less 

 strongly curved and are slightly swollen below the middle. 



