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amount of elytra pale. The basal half of the elytra (except 
the suture and margins) is more or less obscurely flavous or 
reddish, but the markings, although usually distinct to the 
ke specimen has the 
seen except under a compound power. 
PHYLLOTOCUS ANTENNALIS, n. Sp. 
d. Flavo-testaceous, some parts more or less deeply 
.  infuseated.  Prothorax and elytra fringed with white or 
brownish hairs; similar hairs on under-surface and legs. 
uplifted. Antennae nine-, club five-jointed, each lamella as 
long as the four basal joints combined. Prothorax about once 
and two-thirds as wide as long, sides moderately rounded, 
front rather strongly incurved to middle, front angles acute, 
the hind ones rounded off; punctures not very dense, and 
small but sharply defined. Elytra comparatively short; striae 
strong and containing well-defined punctures, inte 
gently convex and with minute punctures. Sides of hin 
corae slightly longer than metasternum; hind femora stout 
and edentate; front tibiae acutely tridentate; front claw" 
unequal, the larger one with a large isosceles-triangle-like 
basal appendix. Length, 5-525 mm. 
De ee South Wales: Dorrigo (W. Heron). Type 
The three specimens taken by Mr. Heron are males, and 
as the middle claws are without long quill-like appendages 
the species cannot be referred to Phyllotocidium, to ve 
at first it appears to belong. The front of the head is mut 
