30 Mr. C. N. Barker on new 
Puate III, 
Fig. 1. Tip of large bristle of Brada gravieri, sp.n. Xx 350. 
Fig. 2. Wooked bristle of Fawveliopsis challenyeria, sp.n. X 300. 
4g. 3. Dorsal bristle of Trophonia sarsi, sp.n. x 90. 
4g. 4. Simple long ventral bristles (@ and b). x 90. 
Lig. 5, Long spinous veutral bristle. x 90. 
tig. 6. Tip of the foregoing. x 350. 
fy. 7. Large and long serrated ventral bristle of the third kind with 
bifid tip. x 90. 
Fig. 8. Serrated tip of the same. x 850, 
co co 
fig. 9. Curved bristle, with broad base, of Gephyrean A. x 880. 
fig. 10. Tip of hooked form. x 350, 
Fy. 11. Outline of the base of the anterior process of Phascolosoma 
lankestert, showing obliquity. x 90. 
Il.—New Species of Carabidee from South Africa. 
By C. N. Barker, F.E.S. 
‘Tue types of all the species described below are contained 
in the collection of the Durban Museum, aid paratypes 
have been forwarded for acceptance to the British Museum 
(Natural History) of all except the following, which are 
uniques, viz.:—Chlenius incandescens, Chlenius marleyi, 
Callistomimus obscurus, Platynus suturalis, and Callistomimus 
pulchellus. The last-named species is already represented 
in the National Collection by one or more examples, teste 
Mr. H. E. Andrewes, to whom I am much indebted for 
kind assistance in comparing my types with those of allied 
species. 
Tribe Lesrint. 
Lebia durbanensis, sp. n. 
Length 7-8 mm. ; width 38-4 mm. 
Head dark to piceous red, mouth-parts and antenne 
rufescent. Prothorax centrally deep to piceous brown, 
shading off marginally to testaceous. Legs and beneath 
testaceous yellow, the latter a shade darker than the former, 
with the sides and apical segments of abdomen and the 
pygidium piceous. Elytra pale testaceous yellow, patterned 
with black as follows: a sutural basal subquadrate patch 
covering intervals 1-4, below obliquely contracting inwards 
to the first, thence in three successive steps of one interval 
each widening to a little below middle, where it emits a 
narrow spur connecting usually, but not always, with the 
luward widening of a submarginal band extending from 
SS 
