576 Mr. G. C. Champion on 
10. Attalus subceruleus, sp. n. 
?. Moderately elongate, somewhat robust, much widened 
posteriorly, shining, clothed with semierect hairs ; black, 
the antennal joints 1-4 partly testaceous, the elytra 
ceruleous ; the elytra sparsely, finely, the head and prothorax 
obsoletely punctate. Head much narrower than the pro- 
thorax, longitudinally bi-impressed in front ; antenne long, 
sharply serrate from joint 4 onward. Prothorax convex, 
transverse, rounded at the sides, broadly grooved within the 
basal margin, the latter somewhat raised. Elytra at the 
base about as wide as the prothorax, rapidly widening thence 
to near the apex, depressed on the disc below the base, the 
suture cariniform. 
Length 22-3 mm. 
Hab. Natat, Malvern (Mus. Durban : ix. 1897, x. 1900). 
Two 2 2. Smoother and more shining than A. frerensis ; 
the antenne (¢?) longer and more sharply serrate, with 
joints 2-4 paler; the elytra sparsely punctured, and with 
the suture raised ; the prothorax black. The form of the 
antennee is like that of Kbeus ramicornis, Boh., 2. Another 
?, with similar antennze and a testaceous prothorax, from 
the Ifafa Mts., Natal (Mus. Durban), may be a variety of 
E. subceruleus. 
1]. A/talus sulcicollis, sp. n. 
Extremely like A. swbceruleus and similarly coloured ; 
antenne (¢) long, rather slender, joints 5-10 triangular, 
longer than broad (much less dilated than in A. subceruleus, 
? ), (%) much shorter and more slender, joints 5-10 about 
as broad as long; prothorax with a narrower and more 
sharply defined transverse groove in front of the basal 
margin ; the elytral suture not raised. 
Length 24 mm. 
Hlab. 8. Arrica, Willowmore, Cape Colony (Dr. Brauns: 
1.x. 1900). 
One pair, the 2 retained for the British Museum. A 
form of A. subceruleus requiring a distinctive name. 
12. Attalus oneilt. 
Attalus oneilt, Pic, L’Echange, xix. p. 152 (¢ 9) (1903). 
3. Antenne very elongate, joints 5-8 triangular, 9 and 
10 narrower, 7-10 longer than those preceding ; anterior 
tarsal joint 2 extending over the base of 3. 
