946 MARTIN JACOBY 



Length 3 lines. 



Broadly ovate, convex, the head flavous, impunctate, the frontal 

 tubercles broad, the carina acute, antennae not quite extending 

 to the end of the elytra, black , the lower three joints flavous 

 below, the third , half the length of the fourth joint ; thorax 

 subquadrate, about one half broader than long, the sides rounded, 

 slightly narrowed at the base, the anterior angles slightly pro- 

 minent, the surface rather convex, entirely impunctate, flavous, 

 with a small fovea at each side ; scutellum black ; elytra con- 

 vex, obsoletely depressed below the base, of a greenish-aeneous 

 colour, closely and finely punctured, their epipleurae very broad 

 and continued to the apex ; underside and legs black , finelj'' 

 pubescent, the four anterior femora flavous. 



Garin Gheba. A single specimen. 



106. Cneorane orientalis , n. sp. 



Fulvous, the antennae (the basal and apical joint excepted) 

 black , thorax broader than long , convex , impunctate , elytra 

 bluish, closely and irregularly punctured. 



Length 3 Yg lines. 



9 . But slightly widened posteriorly the head impunctate , 

 shining, the frontal elevations strongly raised, transversely sub- 

 quadrate, antennae scarcely extending to half the length of the 

 elytra, black, the first and the last joint fulvous, the third nearly 

 one half smaller than the fourth joint ; thorax one half broader 

 than long, convex, the sides strongly and evenly rounded, the 

 surface impunctate, shining, scutellum fulvous, elytra dark bluish, 

 closely, strongly and irregularly punctured with trace of longi- 

 tudinal smooth spaces ; underside and legs entirely fulvous. 



Garin Gheba, December. 



This species, of which only female specimens were obtained, 

 differs from C. fulvicollis, Baly in the entirely fulvous under- 

 side and legs and less densely punctured elytra, from C. cri- 

 hratissima, Fairm. in the black antennae, the rounded sides of 

 the thorax and the blue not green elytra. 



