204 EEDUA'IID-E. 



annulations, intermediate tibise with a subbasal annulation, pos- 

 terior tibiae mutilated ; antenna) annulated with brownish ; 

 tegmina creamy-white, with large brown spots, of which the two 

 largest are discal, one apical and angular, a smaller spot at inner 

 angle and a few very small and nebulous on apical area : pedun- 

 culate portion of pronotum a little shorter than either of remaining 

 portions : posterior portion tricarinate. 



Length 8 millim. 



Hah. "India" (5W?. il/i/.s.). Ceylon (G-Vmi). 



Allied to the preceding species (-S*. crassirosfris, Stfil), but with 

 the pedunculated portion of the pronotum considerably longer. 



1002. Stenolaemus atkinsoni, Disf. A. M. N. H. (7) xi, p. 250 



(1903). 



Creamy-white, longly pilose ; antennae with three broad 

 brownish annulations to first and second joints : head with the 

 eyes piceous and with a pale brownish lateral streak behind eyes, 

 also tvyo central lines of the same colour on the pedunculated 

 portion of pronotum ; basal area of pronotum, three annulations 

 to anterior femora, five annulations to intermediate and posterior 

 femora, three annulations to anterior tibiae, a subbasal annulation 

 to intermediate and posterior tibiae, coxal spots and broken fasciae 

 to abdomen brownish-ochraceous ; tegmina tinted \\ith bro\\"nish 

 about the veins and with three distinct brown spots — one smallest 

 and discal before centre, one elongate discal with a pale central 

 vein beyond centre, the third apical, also with a pale vein; pedun- 

 culated portion of pronotum long, about as long as each of the 

 remaining portions ; pronotum with a distinct central posterior 

 carination, the lateral angles obtusely tuberculate. 



Length 1 1 millim. 



Hah. India ; North-West Provinces {Home. Brit. Mus.). 



Genus MYIOPHANES. 



Mviophanes, Rtntt. Act. Soc. Sc. Feiin. xii. p. 3-37 (1881) : Rec. 

 'd'Ent. vi, p. 166 (1887). 



Type, M. t'qndina, Rent., from China and Japan. 



Distribution. Eastern Palaearctic, Oriental, and Australasian 

 Eegions. 



This genus may be here primarily identified by the pronotum, 

 which in structux'e has the anterior lobe strongly constricted 

 posteriorly, but not pedunculate; the tegmina are com])lete, 

 passing the apex of the abdomen, the part representing the mem- 

 brane \evy long and exhibiting four more or less large perfect 

 cells ; the intermediate and posterior legs are very longly pilose 

 on each side ; the rostrum about reaches the anterior coxae, the 

 first joint and basal area of second joint robust and incrassate, 

 these joints almost subequal in leugth, the first a little longest ; 

 legs long and slender, anterior femora somewhat strongly spined 

 beneath. 



