184 Mr. G. A. K. Marshall on new 



and which appears to be correctly determined, is the same as 

 Strigoptera australis of Blackburn. It is placed in the genus 

 JS J cobuprestis by Kerremans. It was originally described 

 from Kangaroo Island, and two of the Museum specimens 

 are from that locality. The male has the apical segment of 

 the abdomen broadly emarginate, with the outer angles very 

 acute. 



XX. — On new Species of Indian Curculionidse. — Part II. 

 By Guy A. K. Marshall. 



The following six new species of weevils were represented in 

 a collection submitted to me for identification by Mr. E. P. 

 Stebbing. 



All the types are deposited in the British Museum. 



Otiombhyncsin^:. 



Myllocerus carinirosiris, sp. n. 



Rufo-brunneus, insuper brunneo- subter pallide viridi-squamosus, 

 prothorace lineis duabus viridibus ornato, elytris interstitiis alter- 

 nis pallidioribus ; rostro area dorsali elevata in frontem adscen- 

 dente ibique abrupte truncata, areaa lateribus alte carinatis ; 

 funiculi articulo primo quam secundo longiore ; prothorace sub- 

 cylindrico, postice transverse impresso, basi bisinuato, apice 

 rotundato-producto ; elytris latis, longitudinaliter valde convexis, 

 ad apicem truncatis, interstitiis setis squamiformibus confertim 

 obsitis ; femoribus unidentatis. 



Colour black or chestnut-brown, with brown and green 

 scaling ; the sides and underparts pale metallic green ; the 

 prothorax dark brown above, with two narrow green stripes ; 

 the elytra indistinctly striped, the intervals f , 3, and 5 being- 

 brown, the suture and alternate intervals rather paler and 

 more or less irrorated with green scales, especially at the 

 base of 2. 



Head not continuous with the rostrum in a single plane, 

 but with the elevated base of the latter continued on to the 

 forehead, being broadly truncate at its base, and terminating 

 abruptly so as to form a transverse furrow between the eyes ; 

 the latter widely separated and almost circular. Rostrum 

 about as long as broad, longer than the head, somewhat 

 dilated at the apex, the apical margin deeply and acutely 

 incised, the raised dorsal area depressed in the middle, 



