166 Mr. C. J. Gahan’s notes on the 
sticticus, ined.), is in all probability the type of the above 
species, which undoubtedly belongs to the genus Hury- 
nassa. It may be distinguished from other species of 
the genus by the much smaller size of the nitid spaces 
on the pronotum of the male, and by the somewhat 
closer and more rugulose punctuation of the elytra. 
The genus Mallodon will thus have to be omitted from 
the lists of Australian Longicorns. 
Eurynassa australis, Boisd. 
Mallodon australis, Boisd., Voy. de l’Astrolabe, Ent., 
li., p. 465. 
M. figuratum, Pasc., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., ser. 2, 
vol. v., p. 14. 
Pascoe’s description of EH. figurata is so completely 
applicable to the H. australis of Boisduval, that it is im- 
possible to doubt the identity of the two species. 
Cnemoplites princeps, sp. n. 
g. Fusco-niger, prothorace supra valde dense subscabrosoque 
punctato, spatio medio trilobato, paullo elevato, nitido, sparsim 
punctato; scutello medio levi nitido, utrinque dense punctulato ; 
elytris omnino dense intricateque ruguloso-punctatis; segmentis 
quatuor anticis abdominis transversim depressis et dense tomen- 
tosis, segmento quinto fovea tomentosa utrinque obtecto. Long. 
58 mm. 
Hab. Queensland. 
Prothorax transverse; sides subparallel, armed with a series of 
small spines, of which that at the postero-lateral angle is larger 
and more prominent ; anterior margin of the pronotum feebly tri- 
sinuate ; the disk with a slightly raised, trilobed area, which may 
be easily distinguished from the rest of the upper surface by its 
nitid and less closely punctured appearance; the median lobe is 
smaller and directed towards the base; the lateral lobes are tri- 
angular in form, and diverge from one another anteriorly, and 
lying between them, just in front of their common median portion, 
there is a smooth depressed space ; external to each of the lateral 
lobes there is a small nitid and sparsely punctured space in the 
form of a blunt tubercle. The elytra are intricately and rather 
more coarsely rugulose than in other species of the genus. 
The first four abdominal segments are (with the exception of a 
narrow transverse space at the posterior border of each) depressed 
