22 Major Parry’s Catalogue 
elytris glaberrimis, sutura late nigro-fusca; tibiis anticis 
denticulatis, quatuor posticis unispinosis, 
Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 4; mandib. lin. 4. 
Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry (spec. unicum). 
Head with the vertex smooth, punctured, more thickly so on 
the sides. Mandibles scarcely longer than the head, depressed, 
gradually curved, with a strong prominent tooth near the base, 
and two smaller ones before the tip; clypeus faintly trilobed. 
Head deeply emarginate in front, anterior angles bisinuate, deeply 
and coarsely punctured on the sides, slightly depressed on the 
vertex. Prothorax wider than the elytra, closely punctured in 
front and at the sides. Posterior angles armed with a small 
spine. Scutellum punctured. Elytra smooth, of a ferruginous 
brown, the sutural portion nearly black, minutely and sparsely 
punctate, more especially at the sides; humeral angles prominent. 
CLADOGNATHUS QuADRINoDosUS ¢, Parry (2 ignota). 
(Pl. VIII. fig. 4.) 
C. ferrugineo-fuscus ; capitis vertice minute quadrituberculato ; 
mandibulis gracilibus, porrectis, apicibus acutis, intus spinis 
8 vel 9 minimis irregulariter dentatis; tibiis intermediis 
denticulo minimo instructis, posticis inermibus; tarsis sub- 
setosis. 
Long. corp. lin. 9; mandib. lin. 5. 
Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry, etiam Mus. Brit. 
Above ferruginous-brown, beneath lighter. Head deeply 
punctured, with four minute tubercles arranged transversely on 
the vertex. Mandibles elongate, narrow, and acute at the tips, of 
the same length as the body, and armed with 8 or 9 minute teeth 
and tubercles. The sides of the thorax almost straight. Body 
convex. Outer edge of front tibize minutely crenulated. 
CiLApDoGNATHUs ciNcTus, Montrousier, Faune de l’Ile de Wood- 
lark, p. 27. 
This species is also, according to Mr. Wallace, found in the 
Islands of New Guinea, Ki and Arou, and must be considered as 
very questionably distinct from C, Bison, differing in having the 
four posterior femora entirely black beneath, and the anterior with 
a small rufous spot, whereas in C. Bison the rufous patch exists 
on all the femora; in other respects they appear to be closely allied. 
I am not acquainted with a fully developed specimen; those in 
the collection of Mr. Wallace, and my own, being medium varieties. 
