116 
MANDALOTUS CAMPYLOCNEMIS, n. Sp. 
Black; antenne and tarsi of а dingy red. Densely clothed 
with muddy scales, entirely concealing the derm, and mixed 
here and there with a few stout semi-upright clavate setæ. 
Under surface less densely clothed than upper, and with 
more numerous and stouter adpressed sete. ^ Legs with 
numerous elongate sete, the intermediate tibiæ in the male 
with long, thin hair towards apex. 
Rostrum somewhat curved, strongly carinate, the carina 
sometimes almost concealed. ^ Scape straight except at ex- 
treme base. First joint of funicle slightly longer than 
second. Prothoraz strongly transverse, apex considerably 
narrower than base, median groove very distinct, with nume- 
rous obtuse tubercles in male, in the female slightly irregular 
and with small, scattered granules; very feebly punctate. 
Scutellum small and indistinct. ута subcordate ; at base 
narrower, about the middle wider than prothorax ; seriate- 
punctate, the punctures rather large and round, and show- 
ing almost as geminate strie through clothing; suture be- 
yond middle, second, fourth, and sixth interstices obtusely 
tuberculate, the second and sixth at base distinctly tubercu- 
late, a distinct tubercle about shoulder. Tibie strongly 
curved in front, dilated at apex, less noticeably so in female 
than in male, and in the intermediate than the others. 
Length, 64 (incl. rost.); width, 22; variation in length, 43- 
74 mm. 
“На%.--Сізгепсе River. 
The curvature of the apical portion of the anterior (1126 
in the male is so great as to be almost at right angles to the 
base, and is much greater than in valgus, which species 1й 
somewhat resembles. Іп the male the basal segment of the 
abdomen is strongly transversely depressed, in the female 
the depression is scarcely traceable. 
Norr.—The colour of the above and of nearly all of the 
following species can only be seen after the scales have been 
abraded. When the punctures and granules or tubercles of 
the prothorax and elytra are described without mentioning 
the clothing, such description has been drawn up from inten- 
tionally abraded specimens. 
MANDALOTUS PILIVENTRIS, n. Sp. 
Black; antenne and tarsi of a dingy red. Densely cloth- 
ed with muddy scales which entirely conceal the derm, and 
with numerous stout sete, more numerous and depressed on 
prothorax, on elytra sublinear in arrangement and suberect. 
Legs with stout sete, the anterior and to a slightly less ex. 
tent the posterior tibie in the male fringed beneath with 
long, soft hair. 
