432 COLEOPTERA. 
nodosities not distinct, without well-defined punctation. Elytra elongate- 
subcordate, with oblique shoulders, somewhat incurved at the base, hardly 
any broader than thorax there, twice its length ; indefinitely striate, with- 
out distinct punctures or granules, the interstices finely and irregularly 
asperate. 
Legs and antennae like those of C. clarulus, but, owing to the dull 
fuscous surface and indefinite sculpture, very different from that species in 
appearance. 
Underside castaneous, with elongate yellowish scales. Basal and 2nd 
abdominal segments distinctly but not closely punctate, the 1st the larger, 
3rd and 4th nearly smooth, each shorter than 2nd, 5th subtruncate behind, 
6th short and concave. Prosternum deeply emarginate. Metasternum 
broadly impressed. 
Length (rostrum inclusive), 5mm.; breadth, 1? mm. 
Mount Dick. Found by Mr. T. Hall amongst dead leaves, at an eleva- 
tion of 2,200 ft., on the 17th March, 1914. 
3911. Clypeorhynchus setosus sp. nov. 
Elongate, subdepressed, subopaque ; fusco-castaneous, tibiae, tarsi, and 
antennae light chestnut-red, rostral apex piceo-rufous ; thinly covered with 
decumbent, rather short, flavescent setae, and some brighter, coarser, 
suberect ones which are most conspicuous on the hind part of elytra. 
Rostrum rather shorter than thorax, distantly punctate, bearing 
squamiform setae, medially carinate, the sides indistinctly so, with an 
angular interantennal impression ; its apical portion nearly nude, convex 
in the middle, sparingly and finely punctate. Head immersed nearly up 
to the transverse, obliquely oval eyes. Thorax of equal length and breadth, 
a little wider before the middle than elsewhere, nearly straight behind; 
median channel nearly equally distinct throughout, antero-lateral nodosities 
almost obsolete, its punctation coarse but shallow, finer in front, the 
intervals minutely and densely sculptured, the sides more thickly setose 
than the disc. Scutellum small, triangular. Elytra thrice the length of 
thorax, not twice its breadth, with slightly curvedly narrowed shoulders, 
very little broader than it is at the base, gradually but considerably 
narrowed behind the posterior femora, with strongly prolonged dentiform 
apices ;. on each elytron there are 5 dorsal distinctly punctured striae, the 
outer usually more coarsely punctured than the sutural, all finer near the 
extremity ; interstices more or less finely punctured, the 2nd, at the base, 
and the shoulders a little elevated, 4th similarly throughout, 5th depressed 
near the base. 
Antennae slender, finely setose, normal, but with the 6th joint of funi- 
culus rather larger than contiguous ones; club elongate-oval. Legs elongate, 
tibiae slightly flexuous. 
Fem.—Elytral apices simple. 
C. caudatus (3282) only has equally prolonged elytral apices; it is, 
however, a larger insect, with granular thoracic sculpture, elytral inter- 
stices also, but more finely granulate. 
$. Length (rostrum inclusive), 8mm.; breadth, 24 mm. 
Ben Lomond. Three examples taken from leaf-mould by Mr. T. Hall, 
at an altitude of 4,000 ft., on the 3rd March, 1914. 
