428 Mr. G. Lewis on new 



coloribns, tarsis piceis, undiqiie punetatum ; propygidio pj'gidio- 

 que ocellato-puuctatis ; tibiis anticis 5-6-dentatis. 

 L. 3^ mill. 



Cylindrical, short and robust, wholly black ; the head 

 convex, evenly not thickly punctured ; the thorax little pro- 

 minent over the neck, rounded off at the sides, punctured like 

 the head in front and on the sides, with an autescutellar 

 impression in which the punctures are larger and closer, the 

 lateral margin is a little raised and the stria within it well 

 marked and a little incurved towards the base ; the elytra 

 clearly punctured like the thorax, with the smooth basal 

 margin extremely narrow or obsolete ; the propygidium and 

 the pygidium on its convex surface are ocellately punctured, 

 punctures not closely set, the apex of the pygidium is feebly 

 concave and distinctly rugose ; the prosternum — anterior 

 edge with a marginal stria, somewhat closely and a little 

 rugosely punctured, base with a triangular impression seen in 

 certain lights, keel without strise ; the mesosternum anteriorly 

 obtusely produced, marginal stria fairly well defined but not 

 clearly joined in front ; meso- and metasternal plates sparsely 

 and rather coarsely, except in the central area, punctured ; 

 the anterior tibiaj 5-6-, intermediate 5-dentate, posterior 

 5-spinose ; tarsi pitchy red. 



Ilab. Central Africa [Nonfried). 



Teretriosoma Hornii, Lew. 



The pilosity on the first joint is apparently a male character 

 in the genus. Schmidt first noticed this, and Dr. Horn tells 

 me that two of his specimens of the above species have a hairy 

 first joint and in three of them it is smooth ; when the hairs 

 are absent Dr. Horn adds the specimens (presumably female) 

 have the angle of tlie pygidium less acute. This sexual 

 character should be borne in mind when the females, at 

 present unknown, are discovered of J'. Jl;^7^cor/^e, Lew., and 

 T. plumicornej Lew., and others. 



Teretrius austrah'sj sp. n. 



Cyliudricus, rufo-brunneus, nitidus, undique punctulatus ; pronoto 

 angulis anticis prominulis, utrinque sinuato ; clytris basi anguste 

 laevibus ; prosterno basi impresso, striis antice abbreviatis. 



L. 2 mill. 



Cylindrical, reddish brown, shining ; the head evenly, not 

 thickly punctured, punctures largest near the neck ; the 

 thorax — anterior angles depressed and prominent, but markedly 



