Tees E eS Se ee 
215 
TELURA VITTICOLLIS, Er. 
_ This species is fairly common at night on eucalyptus 
foliage in Tasmania, and it occurs also in New Sout ales 
(Mount Kosciusko), Victoria (Mounts Buffalo and Hotham), 
and South Australia (Mount Lofty). Specimens vary from 
having the upper-surface entirely flavous, to the prothorax 
bivittate, and the elytra quadrivittate. Erichson described the 
club of the antennae as three-jointed, but this is true only of 
the female, and Waterhouse has already pointed out that in 
the male it is five-jointed. 
. TELURA CLYPEALIS, n. sp. 
Flavous, basal two-thirds of head deeply infuscated 
(almost black), prothorax narrowly infuscated in middle of 
apex, and obscurely along middle to base, elytra with a 
sharply-defined and almost black vitta from base to near apex. 
Prothorax with four long hairs on each side, rest of upper- 
surface glabrous; under-surface and legs sparsely clothed, 
our segments of abdomen each with a transverse row o 
setiferous granules. 
u 
larger about base. P. ygidium with minute and rather dense 
* 
asperate punctures. Legs long and thin; front tibiae 
E 
_ Strongly tridentate; basal joint of hind tarsi slightly shorter 
than second. Len th, 11 mm. 
ab.—Western Australia: Beverley (E. F. du Boulay). 
Type (unique), T. 4835.. 
extends across four interstices on each, but it rapidly narrows 
un it only covers two, thence being parallel-sided almost 
