132 KOTELINjE. 



Compact and convex, with broad elytra, very smooth and 

 shining, and almost devoid of hair. The head and pronotum 

 are finely, evenly and densely punctured. 

 The sides of the pronotum are strongly 

 rounded, the front angles nearly right 

 angles, the hind angles very obtuse, the 

 base simply and gently rounded in an uni- 

 form curve, and very finely margined. The 

 scutellum bears a few punctures, and the 

 elytra strongly impressed lines of rather 

 coarse punctures, those of the second line 

 being broken up in the anterior half and 

 broadly scattered ; the apical margins are 

 FiT 29 -Anomala separately rounded. The pygidium is rather 

 hiHdu,3. sparingly punctured, and the metasternum 



still more so. The front tibia is armed with 



two sharp teeth, and the longer front and middle claws are cleft. 

 cJ . The clypeus is shining and sparingly punctured, strongly 

 dilated and reflexed in front, with the front margin notched in 

 the middle and produced outwardly on each side. The front 

 tibia is broad, its teeth extremely sharp, the front tarsus greatly 

 shortened and thickened, the last joint very large, and the inner 

 claw dilated and bent at the base. 



$ . The clypeus is rugosely punctured and not shining, rather 

 broad and rectangular, with its front margin nearly straight and 

 strongly reflexed. The elytra are dilated and thickened near the 

 middle of the outer margins. 



Length, 5-6'5 mm. ; breadth, 3-3-5 mm. 



CEYLON: Balangoda, 1776 ft. (G. Lewis, March), Kandy (E. E. 

 Green, Oct.). 



Type in the Dresden Museum. 



Mr. Lewis found this upon Hibiscus flowers. 



113. Anomala helleri. 



Singhala helleri, Ohaus,* Deutsche Ent. Zeits. 1905, p. 90. 



Orange-red or chocolate-brown, with the clypeus and lower 

 surface, except the tarsi and abdomen, pale. 



It is ovate and convex, smooth and shining, with only a very 

 fine and scanty clothing of hairs upon the lower surface. The 

 head and pronotum are finely and rather evenly, but not closely, 

 punctured. The latter is strongly rounded at the sides, the front 

 angles are nearly right angles, but not sharp, the hind angles are 

 nearly obsolete, and the base is gently and uniformly rounded in 

 a single curve, with a fine marginal line, which is interrupted 

 in the middle. The scutellum bears a few fine punctures, and the 

 elytra have each seven rather closely placed dorsal rows of strong 

 and close punctures, the second row disrupted at the base ; the 

 membranous margin is moderately broad. The pygidium and 

 metasternum are rather coarsely punctured. The front tibia is 



