Longicornia Malayana. 325 



seriate-punctate, the punctures here and there divided by irregular 

 raised hnes clothed with greyish hairs, the apices rather deeply 

 sinuate, the outer angle especially produced ; antennae nearly four 

 times as long as the body, the third, fourth and fifth joints pale 

 testaceous at the base; body beneath and legs with a thin grey 

 pubescence. 

 Length 4 lines. 



Apophrena montana. > 



A. castanea, glabra, nitida ; elytris basi dilatatis, postice attenu- 

 atis, apicibus oblique truncatis, angulo externo producto. 



Hab. — Java. 



Chesnut-brown, smooth, shining ; head closely punctured ; pro- 

 thorax with the punctures coarser and more dispersed, and a broad 

 imperfect whitish stripe on each side ; scutellum scutiforra, pubes- 

 cent ; elytra much broader than the prothorax at the base, gradually 

 tapering posteriorly, strongly and closely punctured, but the punc- 

 tures become gradually smaller and are nearly obsolete at the apex, 

 from the shoulder to the suture is an oblique impression which is 

 continued along the latter, the apices obliquely truncate, the outer 

 angle produced into a short tooth ; antennae three or four times 

 as long as the body ; body beneath dark brown ; legs and scape 

 reddish-ferruginous. 



Length 6 lines. 



The specimens are ticketed "Java 6,000 ft." 



Tetraglenes. 

 Tetraglenes, Newman, Entom. i. 300. 

 Caput conicum, tuberibus antenniferis apice sitis. OcuU quatuor, 

 parvi, laterales, a basi antennarum distantes. Os minutum, 

 propectori contiguuni. jJnlennce lineares, fimbriatse, corpore 

 paulo longiores ; scapo cylindrico, elongate ; articulo quarto 

 tertio longiore; caeteris gradatim decrescentibus. Prothorax 

 elongatus, sub-cylindricus. Elytra prothorace vix latiora, 

 sub-parallela, elongata, postice dehiscentia. Pedes brevis- 

 simi ; femora incrassata ; protibice curvatae ; tarsi aequales. 

 Pro- et meso-sterna planata, elongata. Corpus sub-lineare. 

 Mr. Newman says that this is the only insect he has seen " pos- 

 sessing four distinct and widely separated eyes," * * * "each 

 eye being apparently independent of the other three." This is 

 not strictly correct, as a fine line may be distinctly traced evidently 

 connecting the two lobes. That these lobes should be placed at 



