302 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on some new Coleoptera 



of original specimens, or in'furnishing me with information 

 upon the distribution or location of species. * * * 



[The length to which the list extends of British and Foreign Na- 

 turalists to whom Prof. Agassiz expresses his obligations, precludes 

 our giving it insertion. — Edit.] 



Neuchatel, July 1841. 



XXXV. — Descriptions of new species of Coleopterous Insects 

 belonging to the Genus Apocyrtus, collected by Hugh Cuming, 

 Esq., in the Philippine Islands. By G. R. Waterhouse, 

 Esq., Assistant Secretary and Curator to the Zoological 

 Society. 



Order COLEOPTERA. 



Sect. CURCULIONIDES. 



Div. Pachtrhynchides, Scho. 



Genus Apocybttjs, Erichson. 



Apocyrtus Schcenherri. 



Ap. niger ; capite nota inter oculos et utrinque infra oculos ; thorace nota 

 transversa antica, maculisque duabus lateralibus et superioribus, necnon 

 elytris maculis viginti-duabus, splendide cupreis, vel aureo-cupreis ; rostro 

 rugoso-punctato ad basin transversim impresso, capite et rostro canaliculo 

 longitudinali impressis ; thorace crebre punctato ; elytris globoso-ovatis 

 fere duplo thorace latioribus, distincte punctatis, punctis in striis irregu- 

 laribus dispositis. Long. corp. 8^ lin. ; lat. Sf lin. 



This is the largest species of the genus I am acquainted with ; its 

 elytra are less globose, and the thorax is larger in proportion to the 

 elytra than in Ap. injlatus : the beautiful metallic spots with which it 

 is adorned vary somewhat in hue, being in some specimens of a red- 

 dish golden tint, and in others of a copper colour. The rostrum is 

 thiclvly punctured, and the punctures are more or less confluent ; a 

 transverse indented line separates the rostrum from the head, and a 

 longitudinal imj^ression runs from this line towards the fore-part of 

 the rostrum, becoming gradually broader in front and terminating in 

 a line with the insertion of the antennae. The head is rather S23a- 

 ringly punctured ; between the eyes is a small metalUc spot (in some 

 specimens wanting), and beneath the eye is an oblique mark formed 

 of brilhant scales. The thorax is very nearly equal in length and 

 breadth, subglobose, and truncated before and behind ; on the ante- 

 rior margin is a transverse mark, about midway between the ante- 

 terior and posterior margins ; and towards the side of the thorax is 

 a round spot, and just above the insertion of the femur is a broad 

 oblong mark formed of brilliant scales ; the surface of the thorax is 

 rather coarsely punctured, and the punctures are many of them con- 

 fluent. The elytra are more than one-third broader than the thorax 

 — sometimes nearly twice as broad — about one-third broader than 

 long, ovate and very convex ; they are punctured, and the punctures 



