CAEBULA. 



171 



punctate ; apex of rostrum, a central spot (more or less distinct) on 



each of the two terminal 

 abdominal segments, the 

 stigmata and small marginal 

 spots, black ; lateral ab- 

 dominal margins distinctly 

 paler; anterior latei'al mar- 

 gins of the pronotum 

 luteous, levigate, inwardly 

 margined with black punc- 

 tures ; pronotal angles 

 broadly produced, their 

 apices obtuse and slightly 

 paler and levigate ; rostrum 

 just passing the posterior 

 coxae. 



Length 8; breadth between 

 pronotal angles 6 millim. 

 Hah. Bhutan {Brit. Mus.). Naga Hills (Doherttj). Burma; 



Eangoon, Karennee, Mt. Mooleyit (Fea). West Yunnan (Coll. 



Dist. ). 



Fiff. la^.— Carhula crassivcntris. 



283. Carbula indica, Westw. (Peutatoma) in Hope Cat. i, p. 42 (18:37). 

 Carbula fiisca, Hist. Tr. H. S. 1887, p. 346. 



Allied to C. crassiventris, DalL, but with the pronotal angles less 

 produced and more or less concave beneath, their apices broadly 

 subacute ; rostrum reaching the third abdominal segment ; abdomen 

 beneath with a bi'oad central black fascia with its margins notched. 



Length 7 to 8 ; breadth between pronotal angles 5 to 6 millim. 



Hub. Nepal. Sikhim ; Darjiling, Kurseong {Incl. 3Ius.). 



284. Carbula rugulosa, sp. n. 



Ochraceous, thickly and darkly punctate, head and lateral angles 

 of the pronotum somewhat brassy-black ; pronotum with the 

 lateral angles obtusely prominent, with a central longitudinal 

 carinate line, and on the anterior half with some rugulose and 

 reticulate elevated lines; corium interiorly somewhat levigately 

 rugulose; membrane fuliginous: body beneath, antennae, rostrum, 

 and legs luteous ; body and legs blackly punctate ; fifth and sixth 

 abdominal segments each with a large central brassy-black spot ; 

 rostrum reaching posterior cox.ie, its apex piceous. 



Length 7 to 8 : breadth between pronotal angles 4 to 44 millim. 



Hah. jNilgiri Hills ; Ootacamund (AtJdnson, Brit. Ahis.). 



Allied to C. indica, Westw., but differing by the lateral lobes 

 of the head being slightly longer than the central, by the rugulose 

 markings to the pronotum and corium, and by less prominent 

 pronotal angles. 



