CCCXXV 
Subfamily SCARITINÆ. 
Oxylobus punctato-sulcatus, Chaudoir, Bull. Mosc. 1855, 1, 
p. 6; id., Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., XXIII, p. 12. 
Tetara. 
The examples described by Chaudoir came from Nepal. In 
Southern India”the species is represented by a variety in which the 
8t elytral interstice is flatter and nearly half the width ofthe 7%, 
instead of forming a narrow Carina (!). 
Oxylobus costatus, Chaud., Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., XXII, p. 15. 
Konbir; Tetara. 
Chaudoir records the species from the Malabar Coast. 
Distichus puncticollis, Chaud., Ball. Mosc., 1855, 1, p. 47; 
id., Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., XXII, p. 55. 
Without special locality. Chaudoir gives Bengal as the source 
of his specimens. 
Scarites Indus, Oliv., Entom. 36, p. 9, t. 1, f. 2-6. 
Tetara; Konbir; Asansol. 
À common species in Northern India, including the hill districts 
north of Simla. 
Clivina Indica, Putzeys, Monogr. des Clivina, p. 67 (1846). 
Konbir; Tetara. Many examples. 
A common insect in Ceylon and southern India; also found in 
Burma. In Chota-Nagpore the species forms a slight variety, 
distinguished by a continuous, feebly impressed, line of punctures 
across the occiput; in Ceylon and Burma this line is broadly inter- 
rupted in the middle and often appears only as a small group of 
punctures on the sides of the head nearly level with the posterior 
margin of the eye. This is the form described by Putzeys loc. cit. 
Clivina attenuata Herbst, Natur. Syst., X, p. 264; Putzeys, 
Révis. Gén. des Clivin., p. 110 (C. melanaria olim.); 
C. picipes, Bonelli, Dej. Sp. Gen. 1, p. 416. 
Konbir. 
Dischirius....? 
Tetara. 
A single example, indeterminable. 
(!) This variety may be thus characterised: »a7. O. merionalis. — Elytrorum 
interstitia paullo angustiora et convexiora, striisque usque ad apicem profundio- 
ribus. Long. 22 millim. — The îthinterstice, behind, reaches nearly to the suture 
and the 8th joins it considerably before the apex, as in O. punctato-sulcatus type- 
form. The thorax is decidedly more narrowed from base to apex. Hab. South 
India, 2 examples (Coll. Bates). 
