new Lithobiomorphous Chilopoda. 4.49 
Genus LITHOBIUS. 
Lithobius sculpturatus, sp. n. 
Colour yellowish brown, clouded with black; terga paler 
laterally than in the middle ; legs distally yellowish. 
Head with 6-7 eyes on each side. 
Antenne short, with only 20 segments. 
Coxe of toxicognaths armed with 4+4 teeth. 
Terga coarsely granularly rugose, the posterior borders of 
the ninth, eleventh, and thirteenth straight, those of the tenth, 
twelfth, and fourteenth shallowly emarginate; none of the 
posterior angles produced. 
Legs weakly spined, the tibial spine only present on the 
anterior pairs; those of last pair armed beneath with 1, 3, 3, 0 
short spines, and a short spine on the side of the coxa as well. 
Coxal pores 3, 4, 4, 4. Claw of anal leg with basal spine. 
Generative forceps of female with 3+3 spurs and a broad 
trifid claw; genital appendage of male obsolete. Legs of 
fifteenth pair unmodified in both sexes. 
Length about 11:5 millim. 
Loe. 8. India: Kodeikanal in the Palni Hills and Madras 
(J. R. Henderson). 
This is the first record of the genus Lithobius from India. 
Genus HAASIELLA, nov. 
This new genus, of which the characters are given above, 
is erected for the reception of the species from Auckland, New 
Zealand, described by Haase as “ Henicops insularis”’ (Abh. 
Zool. &c. Mus. Dresden, no. 5, p. 36, pl. ii. fig. 41, 1887). 
Apart from the peculiar construction of the fifteenth pair of 
legs, this genus is interesting for the reduction in the number 
of coxal pores—a character in which it stands midway be- 
tween a typical Henicops and the genus Cermatobius. 
Genus Lamycres, Meinert. 
Lamyctes, Meinert, Nat. Tidsskr. v. p. 266 (1868). 
Type L. fulvicornis, Mein. 
By common consent this genus has been dropped of late 
years as a synonym of Henicops; but I think it may be 
conveniently retained on the strength of the entirety of the 
tarsi of the first to the twelfth pairs of legs and the bisegmen- 
tation into tarsus and protarsus of those of the thirteenth, 
fourteenth, and fifteenth pairs. 
-In addition to the type, LZ. fulvicornis, which is common in 
Ann. & Mag. N. Hist. Ser. 7, Vol. viii. 32 
