234 Mr.F. P. Pascoe on some new Australian Longicornia. 
Rather narrow, brown, slightly shining, sparingly pilose ; head irre- 
gularly but coarsely punctured, a short mesial line between the eyes ; 
antenne shorter than the body, ferruginous, everywhere covered with 
scattered erect hairs, the third joint with a long spine, the fourth with 
a short spine, the remainder unarmed; prothorax oblong, the sides 
slightly nodose, the disk with indefinite, roughly impressed punctures 
and an elongate, smooth central space; scutellum triangular; elytra 
coarsely punctured, rather broader behind the middle, rounded at the 
apex, an obscure fulvous band nearly at the middle, and an almost 
obsolete spot at the apex; body beneath chestnut-brown, somewhat 
glossy; legs ferruginous, with long scattered hairs; femora slightly 
clavate. Length 5 lines. 
Allied to P. bifasciata, Pasc., but decisively distinguished by the 
form of the scutellum, which is rounded posteriorly in that species, 
and equilaterally triangular in this. It differs also in the form of 
the elytra, in the colour, and in the indefinite style of the punctua- 
tion on the head and prothorax. 
Phlyctenodes pilosus. 
P. elongatus, piceus, griseo pilosus ; prothorace oblongo, disco subnodoso, 
lateribus angulato. 
Hab. South Australia (Mr. Waterhouse). 
Elongate, pitchy, but paler posteriorly, shining, covered with short, 
scattered greyish hairs, mixed with longer hairs on the antenne and 
legs; head coarsely punctured, deeply concave between the antennary 
tubers; antenne rather shorter than the body; prothorax longer than 
broad, the disk irregular or slightly nodose, the side behind the middle 
broadly angulated ; scutellum subtransverse ; elytra parallel at the sides, 
each with three slightly raised lines, the apex rounded ; body beneath 
glossy reddish brown, nearly glabrous. Length 7 lines. 
Differs from Phlyctenodes tristis, Fab. (a New Zealand species), in 
its oblong prothorax without the two elevated glossy tubercles which 
distinguish that species, the longer elytron with elevated lines, and its 
pubescence. Itis still more distinct from the two Australian species. 
In the ‘ Transactions of the Entomological Society,’ 3rd series, 
vol. i. p. 549, I have separated, under the name of Jsalium, those 
species that differ from Didymocantha, Newm., in their elongated 
muzzle, unsymmetrical antennary joints, unarmed prothorax, «ec. ; 
and it will also be necessary, I think, to separate my Didymocantha 
cylindricollis, which has the joints of its antennee cylindrical, and is 
a more elongate form, without any of the hairs being collected into 
masses so as to form well-defined spots. I propose to name this 
genus Jygesis. An undescribed species (which, with several others 
