216 MARTIN JACOBY 



the disc with two very obsolete sliort and sliglitly curved lon- 

 gitudinal costse, placed near tlie suture , tlieir epipleunr broad 

 and concave , extending to the apex ; the first joint of the 

 posterior tarsi slightly longer than the second ; claws appendi- 

 culate; anterior coxal cavities open. 



Lake Cadu Ciaung N. E. of Bhamò, April 1886. On the leafs 

 of Euryale ferox. 



Closely allied to L. (Galerucella) rugosa Jac. but tlie tliorax 

 impunctate and differing in the broad smooth longitudinal space, 

 the elytra much more finely punctured. The narrowly elongate 

 shape of this species , the unarmed tibite , appendiculate claws 

 and the finely pubescent elytra seem to place the present insect 

 in Lochmcea Weise. A closer examination of G. rugosa Jac. in 

 which the claws seem also to be more appendiculate tlian bifid, 

 proves that Lochmcea would be the more suitable position for 

 this species tlian Galerucella in which genus it was at first 

 included by myself. 



132. Utoclimsea. {Galerucella) rug-osa, Jac. 



Bhamò and Teinzò. The Burmah specimens do not seem to 

 differ from those of Sumatra. 



133. M!ala:x:ia, {Glyptolvis Jac.) viridis, Jac. 

 Rangoon and Shwegoo in Burmah. 



Sastroides , Jac 



Body elongate, pubescent; palpi robust; antenna' sub-filiform, 

 shorter than the body, the third joint very long, the following 

 ones gradually shortened ; thorax transverse the posterior margin 

 straight, the sides rounded, the surface obsoletely depressed at 

 the middle; scutellum broad, pubescent; elytra finely granulate, 

 pubescent, their epipleura? continued below the middle; legs 

 short; tibiae longitudinally chanelled, unarmed; the first joint 



