PS ae ye ees 
Re eae tg 
ges. Pepe Wt 
M, 
a 
and on some Types of Oriental Carabidae. 179 
—albotestaceous.’’ The solitary example has unfortunately 
no antennae left, but in some examples taken by Mr. R. 
Vitalis de Salvaza the 9th joint is light at the apex only. 
I consider it identical with Chaudom’s species. 
75. Abaeetus ? A unique example of an unde- 
scribed species. 
76. Abacetus ¢ This agrees with examples of 
A. chalceolus in my collection, coming from various localities, 
one of which I have compared with Chaudoir’s type. 
Mr. R. Vitalis de Salvaza has taken it both in Laos and 
Cambodia. 
78. Holeonotus ferrugineus Chaud. = Fouquetius cras- 
simargo Tchitch. (Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1898, 453). Tchit- 
cherin’s memoir on Holconotus gives all necessary details, 
but this generic name being preoccupied, Maindron’s 
Fouquetius should be used. 
81. Diceromerus ehaudoiri Flt. = D. orientalis Motch. 
(Et. Ent. 1859, 35). I do not regard this as other than an 
immature example of Motchulsky’s species. 
83. Colipodes ? I cannot at present identify 
this unique example with any described species of the genus. 
$6. Orthogonius profundestriatus Schm. Goeb. Bates 
subsequently identified this species, no doubt correctly, 
with the same author’s O. puncticollis. This, as mentioned 
on a previous page, is identical with O. duplicatus Wied. 
112. Crossoglossa latecineta Bates — Phloeodromius 
nigrolineatus Chaud. (Bull. Mose. 1852, i, 44). The width 
of the black, or dark green stripe, upon which Bates seems 
chiefly to have relied in characterising his species, is very 
variable. It may be broad, or narrow, or even disappear 
altogether. The genus Phloeodromius W. Macleay (1871) 
must be substituted for Chaudoir’s Crossoglossa (1872). 
Mr. T. G. Sloane informs me (on the authority of Mr. J. J. 
Fletcher) that vol. 1, part 2, of the Trans. Ent. Soc. New 
South Wales, containing the description of Macleay’s 
genus, appeared in 1871, though I cannot find that this is 
revealed by any internal evidence. 
IV. 
In July 1920 Prof. Y. Sjéstedt visited London, and at 
my request very kindly brought with him the types of 
some of the Oriental species described by Boheman (Eugenies 
