218 Mr. G. C. Champion on 



with the occipital groove interrupted in $ by a transverse 

 prominence, which is almost hidden by a tuft of fulvous 

 hairs ; the antennae more hirsute and very slender, the 

 terminal joints (apparently) scarcely stouter; the eyes 

 longer and more approximate ; the elytra parallel. 



21. Macratria rubiginosa, n. sp. 



Very elongate, robust, shining, sparsely clothed with long, ad- 

 pressed, fulvous hairs, the head and prothorax with a few inter- 

 mixed, erect, bristly hairs ; uniformly ferruginous or obscure ferru- 

 ginous, the tarsi paler. Head rather long, obconic, at the base much 

 wider than the neck, deeply sulcate down the middle posteriorly, 

 very sparsely, finely, the inter-ocular space more closely, punctate ; 

 eyes very large, separated by about their own width; antennae 

 long, rather stout, joints 9-11 thickened and elongated, 11 in $ 

 fully as long as 9 and 10 united, in $ slightly shorter. Prothorax a 

 little wider than the head, ovate, flattened and obsoletely canaliculate 

 on the disc, obliquely compressed on the flanks posteriorly (appear- 

 ing dilated at the base), densely granulato-punctate, the basal 

 groove deep. Elytra long, rather broad, subparallel (?) or very 

 gradually narrowing from the base (rf); sparsely punctulate, and 

 also finely punctato-striate to near the apex, the interstices feebly 

 raised externally. Legs long, stout; basal joint of anterior tarsi 

 much thickened. 



Length 5|-6| mm. (<J $.) 



Hob. Perak (Doherty). 



Four specimens. A large, robust, shining, sparsely 

 pubescent, ferruginous insect, with an obconic, basally 

 sulcate head, rather stout antennae, an ovate, roughly 

 punctate, obsoletely canaliculate prothorax, and sparsely 

 punctulate, punctato-striate elytra. Compared with the 

 species here identified as M. major, Pic, the head and 

 prothorax are shorter, the head is less narrowed posteriorly, 

 the antennae are stouter, the elytral interstices are much 

 smoother, and the vestiture is not nearly so abundant. 



22. Macratria rufescens, n. sp. 



Elongate, rather narrow, shining, sparsely clothed with long, 

 adpressed, fulvous hairs, the head and prothorax with a few inter- 

 mixed, erect, bristly hairs; obscure ferruginous or brown, the legs 

 and antennae ferruginous. Head rather long, rounded at the sides 

 posteriorly, sparsely, finely punctate, the occipital groove broad, 

 deep, the eyes very large, distant; antennae long, moderately 



