HOMOTTPHUS. 127 



fascia) suffusis, flavo-testaceis ; antennis flavis, art. 7, 8 et 11 

 fusco-flavis ; pedibus flavis. 



J / JL J 



Long. corp. 2 tin., lat. 1-^ tin. 



Ovate, suborbicular, subpubescent, flavous. Head short, and hardly 

 produced ; below the base of the antennae is a transverse triangular 

 impression ; between the eyes is an obsolete T-shaped fovea ; eyes 

 tolerably large, globose, situated at the base of the head ; surface 

 punctate. Thorax transverse (almost quadrate), rectangular; the 

 anterior angles depressed and subacute ; at the base is a broad trans- 

 verse postmedial depression : the surface is finely but thickly pubes- 

 cent, flavous ; at the margins more distinctly flavo-pubescent. Scu- 

 tellum obsolete, flavous. Elytra subglobose, considerably broader 

 than the thorax, punctate-striate, thickly clothed throughout with 

 pubescence ; flavous, with two suffused transverse bands (which be- 

 come obsolete near the suture) and another near the apex (which is 

 continued throughout) flavo-testaceous. Antennce filiform, tolerably 

 robust, flavous, with the seventh and eighth and also the eleventh 

 joints fusco-flavous. Legs flavous throughout. 



From the nighbourhood of Rio Janeiro. In the collection of 

 Mr. Fry. 



7. Homotyphus maculicornis. 



H. oblongo-ovatus, latus, robustus, subtiliter pubescens, punctatus, 

 nigro-ferrugineus ; capite transverse, supra basin antennarum 

 bituberculato, ad basin granulato ; rufo-ferrugineo, ad basin 

 piceo ; thorace quadrato, subcequato, granulato ; elytris latis, 

 punctato-striatis, punctis sat magnis, fulvo- et nigro-pubescenti- 

 bus; antennis ad apicem subincrassatis, articulis \-5flavis, 7-9 

 fuscis, 10 et Y\. flavis ; pedibus robustis, fuscis. 



Long. corp. 2^ tin., lat. 1-J- tin. 



Oblong-ovate, broad, robust, finely pubescent, deeply punctate, of a 

 dark ferrugineous colour throughout. Head transverse, deflected and 

 slightly but broadly produced in front ; between the labrum and the 

 base of the antennae the surface is transversely depressed ; immediately 

 above the base of the antennae are two minute but very distinct 

 tubercles, above which the surface is coarsely granulated : eyes tole- 

 rably large, situated at the base of the head, extending laterally not 

 quite so far as the anterior angles of the thorax : the surface (except 

 at the base) is glabrous and rufo-ferrugineous ; at the base darkly 

 piceous. Thorax broader than the head, transverse, rectangular, at 

 the sides very finely marginate ; the surface (when compared with 

 other species in this group) is almost equate ; two almost obsolete 



