new Species of lUsteiidx. 483 



Ulster monitor, sp. n. 



Breviter ovalis, convexiusculus, niger, nitidus ; fronte stria Integra ; 

 pronoto stria interna integra, basi baud incurvata, externa ante 

 medium abbreviata ; elytris striis 1-2 integris, 3-5 obsoletis, 

 suturali vix abbreviata ; propygidio pygidioque minute punctatis, 

 hoc anguste marginato ; mesosterno stria arcuata integra ; tibiis 

 anticis 3-dentatis. 



L. 8-10| mill. 



Sliortly oval, rather convex, black and sinning ; the head 

 flat and impunctate above, stria well-marked, complete, and 

 nearly straight anteriorly ; the thorax, inner lateral stria 

 strong and complete, not incurved at the base, interstice rather 

 wide, outer stria short, not passing the angle anteriorly, but 

 extending a little behind ; tiie elytra, striae, inner Immeral 

 apical and just passing the middle, 1-2 dorsal complete, but 

 the second is somewhat feeble at the base, 3-5 are traceable 

 only in certain lights and are indicated by fine points, the 

 sutural is fine but distinct, abbreviated anteriorly but only 

 indistinctly shortened behind ; the propygidium and the 

 pygidiuni are very minutely and not closely punctured, the 

 latter is narrowly margined on the outer edge ; the meso- 

 sternum is emarginate, with a stria on both sides of the 

 emargination, the usual marginal stria is complete and well- 

 marked and is arched in front and does not follow the contour 

 of the segment. II. gorilla, Sch., has the mesosternal stria 

 sinuous anteriorly and no short lateral striae. //. adjectus, 

 Mars., has the lateral strire, but they are not so conspicuous. 

 The anterior tibiae are strongly 3-dentate. 



Tlie dorsal striae of this species are very peculiar, but the 

 three species mentioned have some characters in common. 



Ilah. British Uganda {Grauer). In the Deutsciies Ento- 

 mologisches National Museum and my own collection. Three 

 examples. 



Also found by Messrs. Legge and Wollaston at Old Camp, 

 E. lluwenzori, 6000-7000 feet, 1906. 



Carcinops lauta^ Zimm. Tr. Amer. Ent. Soc. p. 253 (1869). 



" Oval, convex, very shining, piceous ; antennae and legs 

 ferruginous ; head and thorax finely and sparsely punctured, 

 punctures of different sizes ; marginal stria of prothorax very 

 line, scarcely obvious in front ; elytra with the sutural stria 

 feeble, coniposed only of separate punctures and abbreviated 

 in front, five dorsal striie entire, slightly curved inwards and 

 distinctly ))unctured ; the inner lateral stria is well developed 

 and finer tiian the dorsal striae ; pygidiuni and propygidium 



