214 ZOOLOGICAL EESULTS OF THE EUWENZOEI EXPEDITION. 



approximated greyish-white lines ; prothorax marked with three linear greyish-white 

 bands above, and a broader band along the lower part of each side. Scutellum 

 brownish or black. Elytra reddish-brown or brown, covered with a not very dense 

 grey pubescence, and marked with two transverse blackish-brown bands, placed one 

 before the middle, the other between the middle and the apex; near the apex itself 

 is a thii'd very faint dark brown band. Body beneath and legs black, covered densely 

 with grey pubescence ; the abdomen marked with a row of small subglabrous black 

 spots along each side. Antennae black, a little longer than the body in the male, 

 extending to posterior fifth of the elytra in the female. Prothorax distinctly and 

 somewhat thickly punctured. Elytra irregularly and rather sparsely punctured on the 

 disc, the punctures being larger and more thickly placed on the anterior dark band ; 

 bicarinate along each side, the lower carina feeble and obtuse ; truncate and slightly 

 emarginate at the apex, with the outer tooth strong and the sutural shorter. First 

 joint of the front and middle tarsi slightly elongated and dilated in the male ; the 

 tarsal claws all appendiculate in the male, simple in the female. 



Length 12-1 3|-; breadth 4-4|^ ram. 



Hah. Mubuku Valley, E. Euwenzori, 6000-13,000 ft. 



This species resembles G. quinquelineata Chevr. in the banding of the prothorax and 

 elytra, but the latter have the ground-colour almost entirely concealed by a covering of 

 grey pubescence, and are destitute of erect hairs, excepting a few near the apex. 



Glenea sp. 



Euwenzori, 6000-8000 ft. {G. F. Scott Elliot). One somewhat rubbed specimen. 



VoLUMNiA WESTEEMANNi Thoms. Essai Classif Ceramb. p. 59. 

 Euwenzori, 2000 metres {Lr. F. Stuhlmann). 



NUPSERHA sp. 



Euwenzori, 5300 ft. {G. F. Scott Elliot). 



NUPSERIIA sp. 



Euwenzori, 6000-8000 ft. {G. F. Scott Elliot). 



DiRPHYA * DELECTA, sp. n. (Plate VI. fig. 17.) 



Head black, with the mouth-parts (apex of mandibles excepted) and the lower border 

 of the gense rufous ; the whole of the thorax, the basal sixth part of the elyti-a, the 

 coxae, femora, and the base of the front and middle tibiae red; abdomen black, with 



* The name Dirphya given to this genus b}' Pascoe has priority over Mtocris Thoms. bj- at least a few 

 months (see note by Pascoe, Trans. Ent. Soc. (2) v, p. 61), and, moreover, the name Nitocris is preoccupied 

 in MoUusca. 



