238 
Pygidium with fairly dense punctures about base, but sparse 
elsewhere. Front tibiae strongly tridentate; claws long, thin, 
and equal. Length, 14-15 mm. 
Hab.—Queensland: Capella (Relton collection). Type 
in Queensland Museum, cotype, I. 10768, in South Australian 
Museum. 
In general appearance like inermicollis, but the clypeus 
is more semicircular, and the transverse carina is subangularly 
elevated in the middle; pachypus has the clypeus transverse, 
other species of the genus. Both specimens appear to have 
feeble remnants of a wide median line on the prothorax, but 
these are possibly due to irregular contraction. 
CORYNOPHYLLUS CURVICORNIS, n. sp. 
PL xxyn; Bp. 81. 
Bright castaneous, parts of head and tibiae, and 
margins of prothorax of scutellum and of elytra more or less 
. angles acutely produced, the hind ones widely obtuse; with 
Father small and sparse but sharply-defined punctures, becom- 
an 
Subgeminate, but more or less irregular rows of e px 
ring punctures, usually in very feeble striae. Pygidium wi 
ar: e but distinct P becoming crowded and shallow 
* 
