79 
EVADODES RUGICEPS, n. Sp. 
Densely clothed with muddy brown or grey scales, scarcely 
paler on flanks of prothorax and under surface than above. 
In addition with dingy whitish sete. 
Head longitudinally wrinkled between eyes; these small 
and very prominent. Rostrum with a very feeble carina 
along middle, depressed on each side; sides above scrobes 
almost parallel. Prothorax rather strongly transverse, disc 
somewhat uneven, with a narrowly excavated median line, 
apex feebly produced ; ocular lobes distinct. Elytra much 
wider than prothorax, widest about middle, thence rather sud- 
denly arcuate to apex; apex feebly notched; striate-punc- 
tate, punctures moderately large, subquadrate, partially 
concealed by clothing; interstices scarcely visibly (except at 
base) alternately raised. Four anterior tibie with small, 
acute teeth. Length 8, width 3j; variation in length, 
6-84 mm. 
Hab.—N.S.W.: Forest Reefs. 
Apparently much closer to decorum* than lineatus; from 
the description of the former it differs by its clothing and 
shoulders; from the latter (specimens of which I have from 
Gayndah) by being very much wider, differently clothed, and 
with more distinct ocular lobes. Of five specimens under 
examination none is distinctly marked; they all appear to 
have been covered with an ochreous exudation, which is, per- 
haps, entirely responsible for their dingy appearance, as in 
four of them four feeble, whitish, longitudinal stripes are 
traceable on the prothorax, and the sides, from head to apex 
of elytra, appear to be clothed with whitish scales. 
PROSAYLEUS PHYTOLYMUS, Olliff. 
This species belongs either to Hutinophea or to Maleuterpes. 
I have two female specimens under examination and which 
have the anterior coxæ separated. Mr. Olliff describes the 
anterior tibiæ as possessing a spine, but makes no mention of 
a femoral spine, which could hardly have been overlooked if 
present. 
MALEUTERPES SPINIPES, Blackb. 
It is curious the strong superficial resemblance both of 
male and female that this species bears in miniature to the 
Tasmanian Prostomus scutellaris. 
EUTINOPHÆA DISPAR, n. Sp. 
Brownish-red, legs and antenne paler. Densely clothed 
with Eng greyish- hilo scales more or less mottled with pale 
* As in decorum, there is a strong resemblance to Mr. Pascoe's 
figure of Ochrometa amena, 
