Longicorn Coleoptera from China. 63 



number of specimens, of which one only is a male ; this male 

 specimen is in Mr. Leech's collection. 



Saperda hrunnipes, n. sp. 



Capitis lateribus et fronte, prothoracis lateribus et corpore subtus 

 sulphureo-pubescentibus ; capitis vertice, lata vitta longitudinali 

 in medio thoracis, elytrisque nigris, leviter griseo-pubescentibus ; 

 antennis, pedibus tarsisque bruuneis, leviter pubescentibus. 



Long. 14 mm., lat. 4 mm. 



Hob. China (Kiu Kiang). 



Head with the front and sides yellowish pubescent, the 

 vertex black, with a faint greyish pile. The thorax yellow 

 at the sides and beneath, with a broad longitudinal band on 

 the middle of the disk, the band (with the exception of a 

 faint median carina) covered with a greyish pile. There are 

 two very faint tubercles, one each side of the thorax, and 

 each marked out by a small black spot. The elytra are 

 black, punctate throughout, and clothed with a greyish pile. 

 The legs and antenna? are light brown and faintly pubescent, 

 the latter are somewhat fuscous towards the tip. 



Glenida, n. g. 



Head flat or nearly so between the antennal tubercles. 

 The lower lobes of the eyes rather large and reaching about 

 two thirds of the way to the base in the male, distinctly 

 smaller in the female, and reaching scarcely halfway to the 

 base. The cheeks in the female prominent, so that the head 

 is broadest across the base ; in the male the cheeks are not 

 at all prominent. The antennge nearly as long as the body 

 in the male, shorter in the female; the third joint longest, the 

 first and fourth subequal, the others gradually decreasing in 

 length. Thorax obtusely conically tubercled at the sides. 

 Elytra moderately long, sharply carinate for two thirds their 

 length at the sides, somewhat oblique at the shoulders, 

 slightly narrowed posteriorly, with the apex broadly rounded. 

 Litermediate tibiae entire, the claws of the tarsi simple and 

 divaricate. 



This new genus of the Saperditge is created for two pretty 

 species from China. It is closely allied to Neoxantha, Pas- 

 coe, from which it is distinguished by its moi-e elongated 

 form, by the less parallel elytra, as well as by the more 

 prominent cheeks and larger mandibles in the female. It 

 approaches the genus Olenea in appearance, but differs by its 

 broader form, tubercled thorax, and entire median tibiaj. 



Ann. & Mag. N. Hist. Ser. 6. Vol ii. 5 



