192 Mr. C. J. Galian on new Longicorn Coleoptera 



Scutellum black in the middle, white at the sides. Elytra 

 minutely and thickly punctured, with the sides subparallel, 

 the basal two thirds with a mixed pubescence of brown and 

 sandy grey, the apical third sandy grey ; apices somewhat 

 obliquely truncate, with the outer angles slightly produced. 



Heteeoclytomoepha, Blanch, (nee Lacord.). 



Heteroclytomorpha punctata^ n. sp. 



Picea, tenuiter pubescens, capite valde punctate ; antennis concolor- 

 ibus ; prothorace fortiter punctato, lateribus trituberculato ; 

 elytris crebre punctatis, maculis nonnullis pallide ochraceis, apici- 

 bus truncatis nee spiuosis. 



Long. 28 mm., lat. 9 mm. 



Hob. Fauro Island, Solomon Islands. 



Pitchy, with a faint tawny pubescence, which is denser on 

 the head and the sides of the thorax. Head strongly punc- 

 tured, scarcely concave between the antennal tubercles. An- 

 tennae nearly half as long again as the body. Prothorax 

 somewhat rugose at the sides and closely and very strongly 

 punctured, in the middle smooth and shining, transversely 

 folded beneath ; with three small tubercles on each side, one 

 median, one near the anterior angle, the third (smaller and 

 more dorsally placed) between these two. (In a second 

 specimen the anterior tubercles are less well developed.) 



Scutellum transverse. Elytra thickly and very strongly 

 punctured ; with some small pale ochreous spots, of which 

 two, more regular than the rest, are placed obliquely on each 

 elytron a little in front of the middle, the others behind the 

 middle ; apices truncate, with the outer angles very slightly 

 and obtusely produced. Anterior femora rugose in front and 

 armed each with a small tooth at about three fourths of its 

 length. 



The two specimens which serve as types are evidently 

 males. 



Note. — A second species from the Solomon Islands agrees 

 so well with Blancliard's figure and description that I have 

 little hesitation in regarding it as the quadrinotata of that 

 author. In this species, as in the one just described, the 

 claws of the tarsi are decidedly divergent, in each the pro- 

 sternal process is almost contiguous with the mesosternum, 

 and the latter is in each hollowed out in front ; the lower 

 margin of this hollow is in quadrinotata triangularly concave 



