UDALRICUS. 



49 



margins convex, posterior lobe slightly gibbous, the lateral angles 

 rounded and subprominent ; scutellum elongately triangular ; 

 corium moderately widened towards apex, its apical margins 

 straight ; membrane passing the abdominal apex ; anterior femora 

 incrassated, armed beneath with a series of long spines ; anterior 

 tibiae a little shorter than the femora and slightly curved ; inter- 

 mediate and posterior legs slender. 



763. Altomarus greeni, Bist. A. M. N. H. (7) xi, p. 73 (1903). 



Head, pronotum, scutellum and sternum shining black; 



abdomen shining piceous ; corium 

 pale castaneous ; antennae, an- 

 terior pronotal collar, apex of 

 scutellum, basal half of lateral 

 margin, a spot before apex, one 

 at inner angle, and venation of 

 corium and the legs pale oehra- 

 ceous ; first joint of antennse and 

 apical half of fourth joint and 

 subapical annulation to femora 

 piceous ; head very coarsely 

 punctate ; anterior pronotal lobe 

 impunctate, posterior lobe and 

 scutellum finely punctate ; corium 

 linearly punctate ; membrane pale 

 brownish, with three distinct pale 

 apical spots ; antennse with the 

 first joint shortest, second longest, 

 fourth a little longer than third. 



Length 5 millim. 



Hah. Ceylon: Gr^m-^olvL {Green). Burma; Bhamo (Fm). 



Fig. 35. — Altomarus greeni. 



Genus UDALRICUS, nov. 



Type, U. scutellatus, Dist. 



Distribution. Burma. 



Body elongate ; head long, about as long as anterior lobe of 

 pronotum ; first joint of antennse robust, considerably passing apex 

 of head, second longest, first, third and fourth joints subequal ; 

 basal joint of rostrum about reaching the area of the eyes ; pro- 

 notum deeply transversely impressed, anterior lobe globose, much 

 longer than posterior lobe which has the latei'al angles subpro- 

 minent ; scutellum with the apex produced into a robust conical 

 spine, slightly directed upward ; abdominal margins a little 

 upwardly dilated, extending beyond the margins of the corium ; 

 anterior femora incrassated, finely spined beneath ; abdominal 

 apex truncate. 



VOL. II. 



