956 MARTIN JACOBY 



appendiculate , elytral epipleurae continued belov>' the middle, 

 anterior coxal cavities open. 



Garin Gheba. 



I have not much doubt that the specimens with entirely black 

 elytra and flavous abdomen represent the females of the present 

 species, they differ further in having a more transversely shaped 

 thorax and longer third and following joints of the antennae 

 but in no other way. 



119. F'ar'idea foveipennis , n. sp. 



Flavous, the breast piceous, thorax nearly impunctate, trans- 

 versely sulcate, elytra widened posteriorly, semi-regularly punc- 

 tate-striate anteriorly, the basal portion testaceous with a large 

 elongate and a small round fovea, the posterior portion piceous. 



Length 2 V2 lines. 



Of posteriorly dilated and convex shape, the head impunctate, 

 flavous, the frontal elevations narrowly transverse, the clypeus 

 broadly triangular, apex of the mandibles black, palpi incrassate, 

 the terminal joint pointed, antennae slender, extending to nearly 

 two thirds the length of the elytra , pale flavous (the tenth 

 joint black in one specimen) the second joint small, the third 

 and fourth nearly equal ; thorax transverse twice as broad as 

 long, the sides straight at the base, rounded before the middle, 

 the angles acute but not produced, the surface with a trans- 

 verse sinuate sulcus which does not quite extend to the sides 

 but is more deeply impressed at that place, the posterior por- 

 tion behind the sulcus subtuberculiform at the sides, the surface 

 not visibly punctured, pale flavous or testaceous, scutellum testa- 

 ceous, elytra strongly widened posteriorly, the anterior portion 

 pale flavous, impunctate, with a deep elongate depression near 

 the suture, the latter thickened at the sides of the depression in 

 the shape of two tubercles, the outer edge of the depression 

 with another small rounded fovea, the posterior portion of the 

 elytra more or less piceous, punctured in somewhat regular 

 rows near the middle, the apical portion impunctate, elytral epi- 



