330 



with fuscous, the humerai callus is well pronounced, and there is a 

 subhumeral fold, their surface is coriaceous and dull. Tliis insect is 

 not vei-y well placed in the genus. The antennes being serrate, and 

 the thorax having diaphanous arese; but it is equally divergent 

 from the genus Diaphanes. 



Subfam. DRILIDES. 



Slenocladius Fairmairei Bourg. 



Hdb. India, Nilgiri Hills; 2 ex. 



The species formerly placed under Hydaspes, are now referred 

 to Stenocladius Fairm. by Bourgeois, which name should therefore 

 be substituted for the two species H. Andrewesi and H. Bourgeoisi 

 described by me, Ann. Soc. Belg., XXXIX (1895), pp. 307-308. 



Ochotym semiiista Pascoe. Journ. of Ent., I, p. 323; Gorh., Ann. 

 Soc. Ent. Belg., loc. cit., p. 310. {Rhagophthalmiis Mots. — Oliv. 

 Ann. Mus. civ. di Gen., 1885, p. 372.) 



Hah. India, Nilgiri Hills; 1 ex. 



Diopionia Adamsi Pascoe. Journ. of Ent. I, p. 118, t. V, f. 2; 

 Gorh., Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., loc. cit., p. 310. 



Hah. India, Nilgiri Hills; 3 ex. At light, 6000 feet. 



Although thèse spécimens are rather larger, and bave the thorax 

 shorter and entirely yellow, whereas in the examples from Kanara 

 it was more or less infuscate ; I do not think it well to separate 

 them at présent. 



HAPLOGLADON Gorh. 

 Notes from Leyden Mus., 1883, p. 249. 



This generic name was proposed by me for an insect from Java, 

 H. Haselti, loc. cit. described, the insects of this section seem very 

 rare; I hâve seen no more of it and the one now described is 

 unique. 



Haplocladon indicum n. sp. — Nigrum subopacum, protho- 

 race elytrisque pubescehtibus, obscure fulvis, antennis articulis 

 tertio ad undecimum ramosis scutello fulvo. — Long. 9 mill. 



Hah. India, Nilgiri Hills; 1 ex. 



The head ia small, and with the antennse and trophi black, with 

 very finely facelted eyes. The antennœ are 12-jointed, thefirst two 

 joints are short, and equal in stoutness, the third to the eleventh 

 each give rise to a branch, those at the base and near the apex are 

 shorter than those in the middle; the labial palpi hâve their apical 



