234 ur. O. Westwood on the 
There remain only the Parastasiides, to which belong 
the typical genus Parastasia, Peperonota, and the three 
other genera which are described below.* 
PARASTASIA, Westw. 
(Sectio 2. Barymorpha, Guérin-Méneville.) 
In addition to the species of this genus, described in my 
monograph in the fourth volume of the Transactions of 
the Entomological Society (1841), a number of species 
have been published by M. Snellen van Vollenhoven, in 
the Tijdschrift Ent. Nederlands, vol. vii. p. 1864; by 
Erichson, in Trans. Ent. Soc. London, iv. 1845 ; Blan- 
chard, in the Catal. of the Lamellicorns of the Jardin des 
Plantes (P. rubrotessellata, rugosicollis and rufolimbata) ; 
M. Candeze, in the Coleopterologische Hefte, 1869 (P. 
basalis); and M. Montrozier, in the Annales Soc. Agr. 
Lyons, vol. vii. (P. Percheronii and bimaculata). 
PEPERONOTA, Westw. 
The genus is still confined to the single rare species 
P. Harringtonii, described and figured by me in the 
Transactions of the Entomological Society, vol. iv. pl. 22, 
fig. 1, and Lacordaire, Genera (Atlas, pl. 34, fig. 1), from 
the Himalayas. 
* In addition to the species mentioned above in the text, I noticed in 
the magnificent collection of Westermann, now in the Royal Museum 
of Copenhagen, three other apparently undescribed insects from India, 
belonging to the Rutelide, namely— 
Aglae rutilans, Reiche, MSS. from Assam ; a small insect, with brilliant 
copper elytra ; 
Callisthenes (? Callisthenes = Anomala pars) consularis, Blanchard, 
from Assam; small, narrow and dark green; and 
Callisthenes, sp. nov., from Bengal; of the size of Huchlora viridis, 
green, but more polished. 
The genus Celidia, of Dejeau’s Catalogue, 3rd ed., still uncharacterized, 
consists of two species from New Guinea, namely, Welolontha marginata, 
Bdy. Voy. Astrolabe, pl. 6, fig. 17, and C. nigromaculata, Blanchard and 
Hombron, Voy. au Pole Sud, pl. 7, fig. 1. 
The genus Zropiorhynchus of Blanchard, Coll. Mus. Paris, p. 176 
(Dinorhina, Lacordaire), belongs to the Anisoplia group. It contains one 
Persian and one Nepalese species, the latter being An. Orientis, Newman, 
Ent. Mag. vy. 384. 
The genus Singhala, Blanchard, formed of several Eastern species 
(Anomala Dalmanni, Gyllenhal, Schonh.), from India, belongs to the 
Anomala group. 
