450 Loiigicornia Malaynna. 



between the upper lobes of the eyes; prothorax rather closely 

 punctured, except anteriorly, and rather interruptedly so on the 

 middle of the disk ; scutellum semicircular; elytra rather coarsfly 

 and irregularly punctured at the base, then falling into rows and 

 terminating at about two-thirds of the length of elytra, speckled 

 with many small whitish spots, the apices obliquely truncate ; body 

 beneath and legs glossy-brown, the tarsi pale yellowish-brown ; 

 antennae reddibh-brown, paler towards the tip. 



Length 7 lines. 



This is a partially pubescent species, but to the naked eye has 

 the appearance of being glabrous, except the small white spots. 



Orinceme lineigera. 



O. fuscescens ; prothorace elytrisque lineis abbrevialis griscis 

 longitudinaliter dispositis, his oblique subseriatim tenuiter 

 punctatis. 



Hub. — Mysol, Bouru, " New Guinea." 



Light brownish ; head and prothorax remotely ptmctured, 

 covered with yellowish-grey pubescence, the latter rather n;trrovv, 

 with a narrow glabrous central line and one or two small tu- 

 bercles and two greyish stripes on each side ; scutellum trans- 

 verse, impunctate; elytra elongate, irregularly punctured at the 

 base, the punctures thence falling into oblique but slightly irre- 

 gular rows, and between the alternate rows are interrupted grey- 

 ish pubescent lines; body btneath, legs and antenuce brownish, 

 pubescent. 



Length 7 lines. 



A more pubescent species than the last, from which, besides 

 the colour, it differs in the finer punctuation of the elytra, in 

 the Bouru example the apices of the elytra are more obliquely 

 truncate. 



Rhadia. 



Characteres fere ut in Orinceme, sed antenuce cnrpore breviores, 



scapo breviter ovato; pedes breviusculi, crassiores, /e'7?»o/-rt 



valde incrassata, tarsi articulo ultimo prascedentibus siniul 



sumptis aequali vel longiore; pro- et mesu-sterna declivia. 



The only species composing this genus is very similar to the last 



in habit, but is at once distinguished by its declivous sterna. The 



scape of the antennae is short and much thickened in the middle ; 



the legs are also short and stout, th ■ notch on the intermediate 



