BY W. MACLEAY, ESQ., F.L.S. gl 



protuberance on the shoulder and in the legs being clothed with 

 shorter and more thinly distributed white hairs. To D, volitans, 

 MacL., W., there is a near approach in size and sculpture, but in 

 this last species the colour is darker, the yellow bands are dif- 

 ferently disposed, the labrum is distinctly nine-toothed whereas 

 seven only are visible in T). Mastersii, the scutellum is much 

 longer and the legs are much more densely clothed with hairs. 

 In almost all the points of diffei^ence mentioned above, it differs 

 still more from D. flavicans, Chaudoir. D. Gruti Pasc, from 

 Lizard Island, the only other Australian species of the genus 

 described, I have never seen. 



CARABID^. 



5. — Pambords viridis, Gory. Mon. t. 161./. 1. 



6. — Pambords Gtuerinii, Gory. Mag. Zool., 1830, t. 

 26,—Mo7i. t. 167. f. 2,—Boisd. Voy. Astrol. 2, 

 page 27. 



The insect before me is evidently the small and black variety 

 of P. Guerinii, alluded to by Count Castelnau in his notes on 

 Australian Coleoptera, as coming from the Pine Mountains, 

 Queensland. 



I believe it will be found to constitute a distinct species. 



7. — Pamborus Brisbanensis, Casteln. Not. Aust. 

 Col. 1867, 'page 10. 



8. — Casnonia obscuea, Casteln. Not. Aust. Col. 1867, 

 page 14. 



9. — EuDALiA LATiPENNis, MacL., W. Trans. Ent. 

 Soc. N. 8. Wales, Vol. 1 , page 108. Casteln, 

 Not. Aust. Col., page 16. 



This insect was originally described by me as Odacantha 

 latipennis. Count Castelnau has placed it, and properly, in a 

 new genus, which he has named as above, but unfortunately 

 without giving the generic characters. 



