278 Mr. C. J. Galian on new Longicorn CoJeoptera 



eyes rather small, reaching not more than halfway to the base 

 of the mandibles. Antenna3 in the male a little longer than 

 the body, in the female somewhat shorter ; scape stout, 

 thickest in the middle, with a broad and completely margined 

 cicatrice at the apex ; third joint longer than the scape, he 

 fom-th and following joints gradually decreasing in length 

 and thickness. 



Prothorax subtransverse, somewhat swollen in the middle, 

 narrower behind than in front of the lateral median spines. 



Elytra rather narrow, oblique at the shoulders, with their 

 sides parallel and apices rounded. 



Legs with the femora rather thick in the middle ; the 

 middle tibise entire ; the claws of the tarsi broadly divergent. 



The sternal processes are simple, the mesosternal narrowly 

 truncate behind and not pointed. The anterior coxal cavities 

 incompletely closed in behind. 



Owing to its distinct and completely margined cicatrice this 

 genus must be placed in the Monoha7nmus-^\:ow^, in which it 

 may come after Coehsterna. From the latter genus it is easily 

 distinguished by its narrower form, its smaller eyes, and 

 broader front, its elytra oblique at the shoulders, and its ante- 

 rior coxal cavities open behind. 



Type E. trifasciella^ White (Proc. Zool. 8oc. 1850, p. 13, 

 pi. xiii. fig. 1). 



A somewhat variable species from China, Hong Kong, N. 

 India, and Penang. 



Thomson apparently confounded this species with his 

 Eutcenia Javetii. In his description of Eutcem'a he gives 

 Javetii as the type ; but subsequently trifasciata, White, is 

 given as the type, and Javetii as a synonym. I have no 

 doubt that trifasciata was written in error for trifasciella, and 

 I feel almost as certain that Thomson was wrong in his 

 identification of that species. At any rate his description of 

 Eutcenia is quite inapplicable to trifasciellaj White. 



Haplotheix, n. g. 



Of the somewhat elongated form and general appearance of 

 the genus Goes. 



Head as in Monohammus ; antennjB (male) more than half 

 as long again as the body ; scape rather long and slender, 

 with a narrow and completely margined cicatrice ; the third 

 joint a little longer than the scape, the fourth to tenth decreas- 

 ing in length, the eleventh nearly twice as long as the 

 tenth. 



Prothorax rather small, laterally spined. 



