198 MARTIN JACOBY 



short, acutely raised; antennae nearly as long as the body, flavous, 

 all the joints, witli the exception of the second, of nearly equal 

 length, slender ; thorax transverse, nearly three times as broad 

 as long , the sides rounded , fattened near tlie lateral margin ; 

 the anterior angle rather broadly produced outwards, the surface 

 microscopically finely punctured or impunctate; elytra scarcely 

 more distinctly punctured, tlie shoulders rounded; tlie first joint 

 of tlie posterior tarsi longer tlian tlie two following joints 

 together ; claw-joint swollen. 



Tenasserim , Thagatà, April 1887. 



Specimens of this species which I look upon as the females 

 are almost double the size of the males; the uniform pale colour 

 of the present insect separates it from any of its allies. 



95. Hyi>lia.sis feiiioralis, n. sp. 



Ovately rounded , convex , testaceous , antenna^ (tlie three 

 basal joints excepted) and a spot on the posterior femora, black; 

 thorax and elytra finely and remotely punctured. 



Length 2 lines. 



Head impunctate ; the frontal elevations broadly transverse , 

 bounded behind by a deep groove, the apex of the mandibula) 

 black ; antenna) extending iieyond the middle of the elytra , 

 black , the lower three joints fulvous, the third joints slightly 

 shorter than the fourth ; thorax aliout three times broader than 

 long , the sides very strongly rounded , narrowly flattened in 

 front of the lateral margin , the anterior angles thickened and 

 distinctly produced outwards , the posterior margin rounded , 

 the surface very remotely i)uncture(l, the punctures very fine ; 

 elytra rather convex , ovate , punctured like the thorax , their 

 epipleura) concave ; posterior femora strongly dilated , short , 

 their upper margin with a black spot at the a})ex; the first 

 joint of the posterior tarsi as long as the two following joints 

 together ; claw-joint strongly swollen. 



Bhamò, .June 1885. 



//. fcinoralis is principally distinguished from its other simi- 



