126 EUCHITONIA MENZELII. 
As to the coloration it much resembles the male of £. 
suspecta Rits. from West-Java '). The prosternum however, 
the lateral callosities visible from above included, is bright 
red (not blackish red as in suspecta), the antennae have 
only the four apical joints testaceous in stead of the six 
apical ones, and the red colour on the middle of the 
femora, very distinet in suspecta, is only present on the 
underside of the femora of the anterior pair. In the male 
of Menzelii finally, the inner margin of the anterior tibiae 
only is covered with a fulvous pubescence, whereas in 
suspecta the intermediate tibiae too, have a fulvous pubes- 
cence on their apical half. 
Description of the presumed male of Wuchitonia Men- 
zelit Rits.: 
Length 48 mm.; greatest breadth of the prothorax 
11 mm.; breadth at the shoulders 12 mm. — Head, pro- 
notum and scutellum black, without pubescense; the head 
beneath and a spot on the front side of the inter-anten- 
nary ridge dark red. The antennae are more slender and 
longer than in the above described female and the third 
joint is less strongly curved; the seven basal joints are 
blackish blue (the seventh spotted with fulvous), the four 
apical ones testaceous. Elytra dark bronze green, provided 
each with three fulvous spots: a narrow transverse one 
along the base, not extending beyond the scutellum, and 
beginning at the lateral margin but not touching the 
scutellum, and two other separated small round ones of a 
paler colour side by side just before the middle of the 
elytron, touching neither the suture nor the lateral margin, 
the outermost somewhat smaller than the innermost; a 
short fallow pubescence covers the elytra all over, on the 
basal spot it is more fulvous, on the central spots more 
whitish. Prosternum with the lateral callosities lustreless 
in consequence of an exceedingly dense and minute punc- 
tuation, red, with the exception of the front margin which 
1) H. J. Kolbe, Stettin. Entom. Zeitung, Bd. LV (1894), p. 8. 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XXXIV. 
