290 Longicornia Malayana. 



angustiora ; humeris dentatis. Pedes elongati, antici {$) 



longiores; femora sub-linearia ; tib'ice anticae (^)curvat3e, 



csetei-ffi rectae ; tarsi fere aequales, articulo ultimo mediocri. 



Pro- et meso-sterna simplicia. 



M. Thomson contrasts this genus with Mcecha, belonging 



accordino- to that author to another *' subdivision ;" latterly, 



however, he has recognized its position near Dihammus, from 



which, as it appears to me, it differs principally in its toothed 



shoulders. 



Anhammus Dalenii. 

 3Ionochamus Dalenii, Guerin, Icon. Reg. An. Ins. p. 242. 

 A. niger, fulvo-griseo-pubescens ; elytris nitidis, maculis pubes- 



centibus fulvo-griseis ornatis. 

 Mab. — Sarawak. 



Black, covered except on the elytra with a short fulvous- 

 grey pubescence ; eye and apex of the prothorax hordere 1 with 

 ochraceous ; scutellum pubescent ; elytra dark brown or black, 

 shining, spotted with fulvous-grey, the spots more or less con- 

 nected at the middle and apex so as to form two irregular bands, 

 the base with numerous black glossy granules ; antennae black, 

 glabrous except at the base, nearly four times as long as the 

 body in the male. 

 Length 30 lines. 



Dihammus. 



Dihammus, J. Thomson, Syst. Ceramb. p. 80. 



Caput antice transversum ; clypeo indistincto ; tuberibus anten- 



niferis validis, sub-erectis. Oculi infra ampliati, distantes. 



AnlenncG {$) longissimae ; scapo obconico ; articulo tertio 



duple longiore ; 4°, 5°, 6° sequalibus ; caeteris gradaiim 



longioribus ; ( $ ) articulis brevioribus. Prothorax transversus, 



capite baud latior, lateribus in spinam magnam productis. 



Elytra sub-trigonata, ($ ovata), apicibus truncatis. Pedes 



elongati, antici longiores; femora sub-linearia; <i6/<e anticae 



curvatae, caeterae rectae ; tarsi sub-aequales, articulo ultimo 



mediocri. Pro- et meso-sterna simplicia. 



Differs from Ncmophas and Anhammus in its short transverse 



head, conjoined with the larger and squarish form of the lower 



portion of the eye; from the former genus it is also distinguished 



by its longer and curved anterior tibiae in the males, but taking 



