Longicornia Malayana. 389 



Glenea Saperdo'dcs. 

 J. Thomson, Ess. &c., p. 50. 

 G. fuscescens, pallide ochraceo-vittata et maculata ; capite vittis 

 duabus, prothorace tribus, ely tris quinqiie, una communi sutu- 

 rali, una basali breve, tenia lunnerali fere obsoleta, macu- 

 lisque quatuor, duabus ante, duabus post medium sitis (ij, $). 

 Hah. — Sarawak, Sumatra. 



Lightish brown, the prothorax darker, striped and spotted with 

 pale ochreous ; cheeks and face whitish, vertex with two, pro- 

 thorax with three stripes ; scutellum entirely ochraceous ; elytra 

 with five indistinct stripes, the humeral almost obsolete, the basal 

 short or forming an oblong spot, one spot just before the middle, 

 the other a little behind it and remote from the apex ; body beneath 

 white, gradually shading off into pale ferruginous; antennae dark 

 brown ; legs pale ferruginous. 

 Length 5 — 6 lines. 



Glenea collaris, Pasc, to which M.Thomson refers, is quite dif- 

 ferent from the insect standing under that name in his collection. 



Glenea Myrsia. 



G. fusca, sordide griseo-vittata ; ely tris breviusculis, quinque- 

 vittatis, vitta intermedia abbreviata ; corpore infra lateraliter 

 albo-vittato ( $). 



Uab, — Amboyna. 



Dusky brown, or blackish, with greyish stripes; the vertex 

 with two stripes, front and cheeks greyish-white ; prothorax 

 longer than broad, with three stripes ; scutellum narrow, rounded 

 behind, greyish ; elytra short, with five stripes, the intermediate 

 between the base and middle, the humeral not reaching to the 

 apex ; body beneath dark reddish-brown, the sides throughout 

 with a nearly pure white stripe; legs dusky testaceous; antennse 

 brownish. 



I<ength 5 lines. 



Remarkable for its comparatively long prothorax and short ely- 

 tra ; in the central stripe and general appearance it resembles the 

 next. 



The preceding members of this section are rather short and 

 robust ; but this and the rest of the section as far as G. Lalania 

 are more slender ; from that point they are again stouter ; there 

 is, however, an obvious connexion between them which forbids 

 any division. G. regtilaris, Newm., {G. Kraatzii, Thoms.), be- 



