Longicornia Malay ana. 369 



Glenea Areca. 



G. fusca, vertice bi- et prothorace uni-albovittatis, hoc lateribus 

 fusco-vittatis ; elytris maculis octo albis, duabus sub-basa- 

 libiis, duabus medianis ; antennis albo-pubescentibus, art. 4*° 

 et 5'" fusci's exceptis ( $ ?). 



Hab. — Sarawak. 



Brown ; cheeks and borders of tlie lower lobe of the eye white, 

 two white stripes on the vertex ; prothorax with one central white 

 stripe, and on each side the white divided by a brown stripe ; 

 scutellum white; elytra with four white spots on each, the first 

 nearer the base than the middle, the second exactly median, the 

 third scarcely midway between the middle and apex, and exter- 

 nal to the line of the rest, the fourth prae-apical ; body beneath 

 with a thin ashy pubescence ; legs pale ferruginous, darker on 

 the tibiae, which are furnished with a dark pubescence, becoming 

 gradually denser, especially on the tarsi ; antennae with a white pu- 

 bescence, except the fourth and fifth joints, which are dark brown. 



Length 4^ lines. 



Resembles the last, but is very considerably narrower, and, 

 inler alia, the spots on the elytra are differently arranged. 



Glenea hlandina. 

 Pascoe, Trans. Ent. Soc. ser. 2, iv. 259. 



G. nigrescens, subtomentosa, coeruleo-vittata et maculata; pro- 

 thorace antice latiori ($). 



Hab. — Sarawak, (and Penang ?) 



Dark brown or black ; cheeks, border round the eyes, two 

 stripes on the vertex, three on the prothorax, the scutellum, and 

 five or six spots on each elytron, pale cobalt-blue, the suture 

 with a line of greyish hairs ; body beneath and femora reddish- 

 fulvous, pectus and sides of the abdomen more or less covered 

 with a white pubescence ; tibiae, particularly the lower part, and 

 tarsi, blue, or sometimes white from age ; antennae blackish, the 

 first three joints blue beneath; prothorax in the female broadest 

 anteriorly for about a quarter of its length, then gradually narrow- 

 ing to the base. 



Length 6 lines. 



With this I have associated with some hesitation an example 

 from Penang, which I take to be the male ; it is considerably 



VOL. III. THIRD SERIES. PART IV.— JUNE, 1867. B B 



