124 EUCHITONIA MENZELII. 
antennae is black, that on the under surface of the body 
fulvous. The inner margin of the anterior tibiae is covered 
with a dense fulvous pubescence. 
The head is shining black and sparsely punctate, except 
on the inter-antennary ridge where the punctures are 
more numerous; the mandibles are rather densely covered 
towards the base with elongate punctures; the inter-an- 
tennary ridge is slightly concave and, in the middle, divided 
by an impressed line which ends anteriorly in a smooth 
transverse impression; the outer angles of the ridge are 
bluntly pointed; the under surface of the head is trans- 
versely wrinkled. — The antennae are relatively short, 
the top reaching to the hind margin of the first abdominal 
segment; the scape is broad and short, measuring half 
the length of the third joint, widened at the top on the 
outside and densely covered with minute punctures inter- 
mixed with some larger ones; the third joint is rather 
strongly curved, it becomes gradually thicker towards the 
end and has not quite double the length of the fourth; 
the fourth joint is equal in length to the fifth, the suc- 
ceeding joints gradually decrease in length except the 
eleventh which is somewhat longer than the tenth ; joints 
eight to ten are subdentate at the apex in front. 
The prothorax is transverse, constricted and transversely 
grooved near the base and apex; laterally a large cal- 
losity is visible, which extends from the anterior margin 
of the thorax to the constricted basal portion. The disk 
of the prothorax is very shining black with faint greenish 
tinges all around, nearly impunctate, vaguely transversely 
wrinkled laterally and with a large shallow impression at 
both sides at some distance from the middle-line; these 
impressions have at their base a distinct tubercle; the disk 
is separated from the lateral callosities (part of the pro- 
sternum) by a narrow furrow. The scutellum is green, of 
a triangular shape with curvilinear sides and acute tip, 
impressed along the middle and covered with a few punctures. 
Elytra long, parallel-sided, narrowing near the apices 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XXXIV. 
