M 



110 Mr. OliverE. Janson's Additions to 



cephala, but the description applies to the typical form, 

 and the name therefore sinks as a synonym. 



The specimen bearing the " Type " label from the Parry 

 collection, cited by AVestwood, is in my possession. 



Meter orrhina sinuatocollis, p. 9G. 



The type is incorrectly stated to be in the Paris Museum. 

 The specimen described and figured by Westwood (as a 

 variety of elegans, Fab.), as cited by him, was in the Parry 

 collection, and is now in my possession. It bears Parry's 

 " Type " label, and must be regarded as the type of this 

 species, Westwood's description taking priority over that 

 of smaragdina, Burm. {nee G. P.), and it is the type of the 

 latter that is in the Paris Museum. 



Anatona alboguttata, p. 115. 



Reference to Westw., Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1874, 

 p. 476, pi. 7, fig. 4, is omitted. 



Glycyphana minima, Bates, Entomologist, xxiv, 1891, 

 Supp. p. 21. 

 This species, founded on a single specimen stated to have 

 been received from Captain G. Young, from the Hill region 

 of Kulu, North-western India, is omitted. Mr. Arrow 

 informs me that he doubts the correctness of the locality 

 assigned to it, and believes it will prove to be of Malayan 

 origin. I have at present seen nothing from India that 

 agrees with the description. 



Goliathopsis despectus, p. 206. 



The type of this species is undoubtedly the specimen in 

 the Oxford Museum, which I have examined and fomid to 

 agree with Westwood's description and figures. It, more- 

 over, has the mouth-parts extracted and momited on a 

 card beneath the specimen, as is usually the case with the 

 Westwoodian types. I have before stated (Cist. Ent. ii, 

 1881, p. 610) that Westwood's figures were evidently not 

 made from the specimen that is in the British Museum. 



The examination of the type of despectus has sho^ra me 

 that cervus, Jans., is not the same species. In comparing 

 the two forms (the female type in both cases) I find that in 

 cervus the clypeus is more broadly and strongly reflexed 

 at the apex (especially at the sides, where it projects in an 

 obtuse angle), the prothorax is conspicuously larger and 



