62 Mr. F. P. Pascoe on new Genera 
and whose intention it was to publish omissions aud corrections 
in a Supplement *. ‘This fine species finds its nearest ally in 
T. Odewahnii, from which it differs in its bispinous and less 
closely punctured elytra, the slightly thickened femora, the 
tubercle (not spine) at the sides of the prothorax, &c. Judging 
from JT. Odewahnii, there is uot much difference in the length 
of the antenne in the two sexes. 
Lygesis mendica. 
L. nitide castanea, postice pallidior, sparse griseo-pilosa; capite 
antice leviter producto; prothorace latitudine sesquilongiore, sat 
sparse irregulariter punctulato; scutello dense griseo-villoso ; 
elytris longiuseulis, basi sparse punctatis; femoribus modice cla- 
vatis. Long. 4-44 lin. 
Hab. New South Wales (Rope’s Creek). 
Closely allied to L. eylindricollis ; but the elytra consider- 
ably longer, and the prothorax much less punctured; the 
punctures, however, are only to be seen in abraded examples. 
Uracanthus strigosus. 
U. silaceus, pilis fulvo-griseis vittatim vestitus ; capite modice elon- 
gato; mandibulis apice nigris; palpis ferrugineis; prothorace 
latitudine paulo longiore, utrinque in medio fortiter calloso ; 
elytris prothorace fere quinquies longioribus, apicibus introrsum 
emarginatis bispinosis, spina suturali et exteriore fortiter productis ; 
corpore infra pedibusque sat dense adsperso-villosis. Long. 9 lin. 
Hab. New South Wales (Rope’s Creek). 
This species is readily distinguished by its fulvous-grey 
hairy stripes, the intervals naked; the prothorax is shorter 
than in the other species, and with a larger lateral callus. 
EMENICA. 
(Uracanthine.) 
Caput antice elongato-quadratum, inter antennas suleatum ; clypeus 
magnus; labrum breve. Oculi mediocres, leviter emarginati. 
Antenne lineares, subvalide, corpore longiores, articulo basali 
breviusculo, tertio longitudine fere esquali, cxteris longioribus, 
apice (ultimo excepto) obliquis. Prothoraz oblongus, subcylin- 
dricus. Sceutellum triangulare. Elytra elongata, basi prothorace 
vix latiora, lateribus subparallelis, apicibus rotundatis. Pedes 
* In the ‘Genera’ (ix. p. 411, note) we are told that we should find 
this Supplement at the end of the volume; but at his lamented death it 
could not have been in a state for publication. 
