1900.] INSECTS AM) A R AC 11 XI US FllOM SO.UAIJ LAX1). .'!"> 



vitta. and a submarginal vitta on each elytron reaching from the 

 middle to the apex, where it joins the sutural vitta, ciuuainon- 

 eoloured ; a small punctiforra spot at the extreme base, two spots 

 in front of the middle and two behind the middle of each elytron, 

 snow-white ; the inner spot of the anterior pair larger than the 

 outer, elongate-oval in shape, and marked in the middle with a 

 narrow brown spot ; the outer spot of the same pair emarginate 

 in front : the two spots of the posterior pair elongate, with the 

 inner one commencing before the outer and coalescing with it 

 behind. Body underneath with an ashy-grey pubescence along 

 the middle, fulvous brown towards the sides ; legs brown, more or 

 less suffused with grey at the base and on the ventral side. Inter- 

 coxal process of the inesosternum very feebly tubercled in the 

 middle. Last abdominal segment feebly and sinuately emarginate 

 at the apex. 



Antennae longer (by the last three or four joints) than the body, 

 third joint half as long again as the fourth. 



C'i.noPLESTS EBVOELI Faivm. 



West (April Hi to Aug. 7, 1805) and North-west Somaliland, 



I laladi 1 1 Jet. 4, 1 v '-»7). Three examples, two from the latt»r locality. 



( 'i ic \titks jaspideus Serv. 



Somaliland ( l s< .'o or 1 897). Ten specimens. This species occurs 

 also in West and East Africa and in Abyssinia. 



Cai.mtuyi;/, \ pauli (Fairm.). 



Anoplosteiha patdi Fairm. C. R. Soc. Ent. Belg. 1884, p. 124; 

 Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1887, p. 338. 



Wesl Somaliland, Bularli (May 24, l s i>.">). One specimen. 



In this Bpeciesand in the closely allied Nouth-.\IVi<-au J. ,/"'*'/'''"''' 

 White the claws of the tarsi are divaricate, and the scape of the 

 antenna is entirely devoid of a cicatrix. Both species are out of 

 place in Anoplorti (ha and should he referred to tin • uenus Calotkyrza 

 Thorns., with which they agree in all essential points of structure. 

 \ third African species of Calotkyrza has been described by 

 Dr. Gestro (Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. (2) x\. p. 423), the remaining 

 species of this genus being the two Indian forms -O. sehestedi 

 Fabr. ESnt. Syst. Suppl. p. L46 (=''. margaritifera Thorns.) and 

 irgariiifi ra Weal w . 



< taoesoa i - pli kii obkig Serv. 



North-wesl Bomaliland, Elargaisai \pril 25 to 28, L895). Oue 

 example. This species is found in Senegambia, in Bast Africa and 

 Natal, an example from the last-mentioned locality forming the 

 t) pe of White's < '. natak 



Central or Baal 8 aliland (1897). One toinewhal rubbed 



; " »pe imen. 

 Pboc. Zool. 8a . L900, No. 1 1 1. 8 



