24 Major Parry’s Catalogue 
gineis, ineequaliter punctatis, sutura ad basin marginibusque 
nigro-fuscatis. 
Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 1. 
g Pp 
Hab. N. Hebrides. 
Female with the head rather coarsely punctured, except on 
the vertex, which is smooth. Mandibles short, punctured, the left 
with a tooth a little before the apex, the right with one near the 
base. Prothorax coarsely punctate, especially at the sides and 
in front; elytra punctate, having some of the punctures disposed 
in lines; the external margin of the front tibize crenulated, of the 
intermediate and posterior armed with a-single spine. 
This species was found rather abundantly at New Hebrides, by 
Mr. M‘Gilleray, the naturalist to the expedition of H. M. S. 
Herald. 
The locality of New Holland assigned to it by Mons. Reiche 
appears to be erroneous. 
Crapoenatuus Tracutus, Voll. (PI. VII. fig. 6). 
$ C. Tragulus, Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 113, tab. vii. fig. 4, 5, 6 
(1861). 
C. productus, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc., 1862, p. 109. 
Fem.—C. niger, subnitidus; clypeo parvo, rotundato; mandi- 
bulis brevibus, arcuatis, unidentatis, rugoso-punctatis; capite 
rugoso-punctato, postice levi; prothorace antice angustato, 
lateribus rotundatis, fusco-cinnamomeis, plaga obliqua nigra 
notatis; tibiis quatuor posticis denticulo parvo armatis. 
Long. corp. lin. 11—12. 
Hab. Ternate (nec Sumatra). 
On my recent visit to Leyden, having an opportunity of con- 
sulting the specimens described by M. van Vollenhoven in his 
interesting memoir above referred to, I ascertained that the insect 
described and figured by him, fig. 6, as the 2 of T’ragulus is in 
fact the 2 of D. purpurascens (var. Saiga? ); vid. tab. vii. fig. 1. 
There are several specimens in the collection, and M. van Vol- 
Jenhoven kindly presented me with the one from which the 
present diagnosis is drawn up. With reference to my description 
of C. productus 6, as having the intermediate tibiz unarmed, I 
find, having subsequently examined numerous fully developed 
specimens, that this is an error, and upon again referring to the 
type specimen in Mr. Wallace’s cabinet the rudiment of a very 
minute tubercle, but scarcely visible to the naked eye, is found to 
