424 Records of the Indian Museum. [VoL. XI, 
Genus EURYTRACHELUS, Thomson. 
Eurytrachelus fulvonotatus, Parry. 
E. Himalayas: Darjeeling District—Darjeeling, 7000 ft.(7 2) ; 
Kurseong 5000-6000 ft. (& @ ). 
This species is distinguished by the structure of its clypeus 
from the genus Hemisodorcus with which it has hitherto been asso- 
ciated. 
The extent of the fulvous markings is very variable in both 
sexes ; sometimes only the posterior spots on the pronotum and 
the posterior streaks on the elytra remain; usually their anterior 
counterparts are also present and these may fuse with them; the 
pronotum may be bordered by fulvous markings on all four sides, 
The female resembles the male in colour. 
Eurytrachelus reichei, Hope. 
(Pie sori ie 2) 
E. Himalayas: Darjeeling District—Darjeeling, 6000-7000 ft. 
(7 2); Kurseong 5000-6000 ft. (7 @); 
Siliguri, in the Terai a few miles south of 
the base of the hills (o). 
E. pracellens, Méllenkamp, also from the Himalayas, must be 
very near if not identical with this species. The thickness of the 
mandibles of relatively large males, and the width of the pair of 
teeth on the inner side of each, are very variable. 
Females of this species closely resemble those of E. tityus. 
They are, however, distinguished by the sculpture of the posterior 
ends of the elytra. In females and small males of both species the 
elytra bear a series of deeply impressed longitudinal punctured 
grooves with smooth ridges between them, of which ridges the first 
and third and often the sixth from the suture are the broadest. In 
the female of FE. veichei the sixth ridge is of approximately uniform 
width throughout, and tends to be enlarged at the posterior end 
where it bends inwards to meet the end of the third ridge (see 
pl. xxix, fig. 2). In small males of E. reichet, it is also of uniform 
width throughout but the posterior ends of all the ridges are 
obsolete. 
Eurytrachelus submolaris, Hope. 
(Pl. axes fig. 4.) 
W. Himalayas: Murree(o@ 92); Naini Tal* (7). 
This species is represented in the Dehra Dun collection by a 
short series of males without any locality record. The largest 
specimen answers closely to Boileau’s account of the type (Trans. 
Ent. Soc. London, 1913, pp. 251-2, pl. ix, fig. 10). There is a 
similar specimen from Naini Tal in the Pusa collection. : 
The female is very like that of E. reichei, but the striation of 
the elytra is weaker (see pl. xxix, fig. 4, and Boileau, Bull. Soc. 
