of new species of Lucanidce. 413 



Allied to F. laticoUls, Escli. ; differs from it in having 

 tlie clypeus shorter and more evidently emarginate, by 

 the emarginate ocular canthi, by the well-marked pro- 

 thoracic fove^, and finally by having the strife much 

 deeper. 



L. 14 millim. W. 4-2 millim. 



Hab. — Mysol. Colls, de Mniszech and Parry. 



Figulus punctato-striatus, H. Deyr. 



Black, rather short, clypeus scarcely apparent, entire ; 

 prothorax coarsely punctured at the sides, finely on' the 

 disc, yvith. a punctured central fovea extended anteriorly 

 and posteriorly by a few large punctures ; elytra dentate 

 at the shoulders, traversed by wide deep strias furnished 

 with large punctures, interstices convex. 



A variety from Malacca is a trifle smaller, the pro- 

 thoracic fovea is less marked and might rather be styled 

 a longitiidinal depression, the ocular canthi are a little 

 less sinuate in front ; some immature specimens are red- 

 brown. 



Allied to F. ater, but wider in proportion, easily dis- 

 tinguished by the width and coarser punctuation of the 

 elytral stria3, by the more conspicuously dentate shoulders, 

 by the visible punctuation of the entire surface of the 

 prothorax, and lastly by the different form of the clypeus. 



L. 13-5 millim. W. 4-2 millim. 



Hah. — Timor, Malacca. Colls, de Mniszech and 

 Parry. 



Fiyulus rugosus, H. Deyr. 



Blackish-brown ; short, wide, strongly punctate. 



Head transverse-quadrate, rounded at the angles, and, 

 as it were, truncate in front; clypeus conspicuous, narrow, 

 sub-truncate in front; rather strongly punctate m the 

 middle and behind ; with four distinct tubercles and one 

 somewhat obsolete in the centre in front. 



Prothorax transverse, with the posterior angles broadly 

 rounded, covered at the sides with a coarse punctuation 

 extending on the disc very nearly to a long central dcjH-es- 

 sion furnished with large scattered punctures, and nearly 

 reaching the little tubercle on the anterior margin and 

 the posterior margin. 



^ Fr2 



