a 
114 Mr. C. O. Waterhouse on the 
R. unicolor, but is much less closely punctured both on 
the thorax and elytra, the disk of the former being almost 
smooth as is also the scutellum; in &, unicolor the pos- 
terior tibiz have scarcely any hair on the inner edge, 
whereas in the present insect there is a fringe of long 
fulvous hair in both sexes. 
Hab.— Yokohama. 
Glycyphana pilifera, Motsch. 
G. pilifera, Motsch., Etud. Ent. 1860, p. 15. 
Hab.—Japan, N. and 8. 
Glycyphana argyrosticta, Burm. 
G. argyrosticta, Burm. Handb. ii. p. 360. 
G. albosetosa, Motsch. Etud. Ent. 1861, p. 9. 
Hab.—Japan, N. and §. 
A black variety of this species occurs, but apparently 
only in the north. 
Glycyphana Sieboldi, Snellen v. Voll. 
G. Sieboldi, S. v. Voll., Tijdsch. Ent. Nederl. vii. 
1864, p. 158. 
Hab.—Japan. 
Glycyphana fulvistemma, Motsch. 
G. fulvistemma, Motsch. Schrenck, Reis. 1860, p. 135. 
Hab.—Mongolia; Japan. 
Cetonia submarmorea, Burm. 
C. submarmorea, Burm. Handb. ui. p. 460. 
Hab.—Japan. 
Cetonia speculifera, Swartz. 
C. speculifera, Swartz, Schénh. Syn. Ins. i. 3. 
Hab.—China and Japan. 
Anthracophora rusticola, Burm. 
A, rusticola, Burm. Handb. iii. p. 624. 
Hab.—Japan. 
