Pln/topJiar/ous Coleoptera of Javan. 85 
Chlamf/s spilota. 
Elongata, parallela, convexa, nigro-picca, opaca, obscure 
fulvo-maculata, antennis pedibuscjue obscure fulvis, his 
uigro-piceo maculatis, posticis fere totis iiigro-})iceis, 
thorace rude rugoso - punctato, flavo - maculato, maculis 
plus minusve elevatis, hie ilHc sajpe coufluentibus ; medio 
gibboso, glbbo apice leviter sulcato ; elytris profunde 
punctatis, suljuitidis, obscure fulvo-maculatis, tubercuHs 
iiounulhs, inter se retc elevato connexis, instructis. 
Long. 1^ — 1| lin. 
i7f/i.— Japan (Mr. Moor). 
Head deeply and coarsely punctured, the clyj^eus and 
two large spots on the front fulvous ; the frontal patches 
are smooth and distantly punctured ; they occupy nearly 
the whole space between the upper half of the eyes, and 
each send a small branch from the lower extremity into 
the emargination of the eyes. Thorax rugose-punctate, 
covered in front and on the sides with irregular, ill-defined, 
slightly-raised obscure fulvous spots ; disk gibbous, the 
gibbosity bounded on cither side by an oblique depression, 
compressed posteriorly, its apex faintly sulcate; on its 
anterior surface arc a number of small raised reticulations. 
Elytra quadrate-oblong, sides with the basal lobe strongly 
produced; upper surface deeply punctured, the punctures 
irregularly arranged in longitudinal stria3 ; each elytron 
with a number of large, strongly-raised, irregular tubercles, 
connected here and there by irregular ridges ; four of these 
are transversely compressed, and are placed as follows : 
one just below the basilar space, on the middle of the 
disk ; the second just below the middle, close to the suture ; 
the third on the outer disk, parallel with the last ; and the 
fourth near the outer margin, close to the apex. In the 
inner disk, near the suture, halfway betAveen the middle 
and the apex, is a large conical tuberosity, its apex trun- 
cate. 
Fam. CRYPTOCEPHALID^, Lac. 
Genus CcENOBius, SufTr. 
Lin. Ent. xi. 61. 
The species described by Suffrian are found in Caffraria ; 
it is, therefore, very remarkable to find the genus reappear 
in such a totally different part of the world. ]Mr. Lewis 
