24 Mr. G. J. Arrow on 



Rhizotrogus rufus, sp. n. (PI. I. fig. 2.) 



Lsete castaneo-rufus, capite obscuriori abdomineque pallide flavo ; 

 sat late ovatus, nitidus, glaber, pectore dense fulvo-hirsuto ; 

 capite dense fortiter punctato, fronte rugosa, clypeo parvo, mar- 

 gine integro, arcuato, reflexo ; pronoto crebre et minute punc- 

 tato, margine laterali crenulato, ante medium angulato, dein ad 

 angulum anticum et posticum fere recto, hoc fere quadrato, illo 

 paulo producto ; scutello lato, laevi ; elytris subtiliter parum 

 aequaliter punctatis, margine suturali costisque discoidalibus 

 duabus vix perspicuis lawioribus ; pygidio subtiliter sat crebre 

 punctato ; pedibus parum gracilibus, tibiis anticis robustis, 

 3-dentatis, unguibus fortiter arcuatis, medio valde dentatis : 



S , clava antennali duplo longiori quam stipitem ; unguorum dente 

 paulo post medium sito ; pygidio leviter convexo : 



$ , clava antennali quam stipitem multo breviori ; unguorum dente 

 paulo ante medium sito ; pygidio deplanato, apice leviter 

 porrecto. 



Long. ]4-16 mm.; lat. max. 9 mm. 



NiLGlRl Hills: Dodabetta, 8000 ft. (May), Ootacamund 

 (April). 



This insect has been sent to me by Mr. T. V. Ram a krishna 

 Ayyar, who found it in large numbers just beneath the 

 surface-soil in plantations of cinchona seedlings. 



It is moderately short and broad in shape, very smooth 

 and sinning, with the metasternum densely clothed with 

 rather long tawny hair. The legs are not very long, the 

 front tibiae rather short and armed with three strong but not 

 sharp teeth, separated by acute notches. The clypeus is 

 small, very strongly and closely punctured, with the margin 

 regularly rounded and entire, and the forehead rugose, the 

 punctures coalescing, carinate at its posterior limit. The 

 pro not inn is broad, not very convex, closely and rather 

 evenly punctured, with its lateral margins crenulated, angu- 

 lated in the middle, and nearly straight from there to the 

 front and hind angles, of which the former is a little produced 

 and the latter a right angle. The scutellum is broad and 

 almost unpunctured. The elytra are finely and moderately 

 closely punctured, with thesutural margins and two indistinct 

 discoidal costse smoother. Tbe pygidium is also finely and 

 moderately closely punctured. The antennae are 10-jointed, 

 joints 3-7 very short and trausverse in the male and 8-10 

 forming a very long club more than twice as long as the 

 entire footstalk. In the female joints 3 and 4 are a little 

 longer than wide and the club is very short. The basal joint 



