430 Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society. 



LuLLius MAJOK, sp. n. (Tab. VIII., fig. 7). 



Head, pronotum, excluding produced posterior area, and body 

 beneath black ; antennae, anterior margin of pronotum, and legs 

 ochraceous ; posterior pronotal area and elytra pale brownish, the 

 areolets at costal and apical areas greyish ; pronotum, and elytra 

 excluding the areolate areas, granulate ; elytra rather strongly de- 

 pressed on each side. 



Long. 3^ mm. 



Hah. Cape Colony. 



LuLLius? MiNOK, sp. u. (Tab. VIII., fig. 8). 



Closely allied to the preceding species, but much smaller ; antennae 

 and legs darker, elytra much narrower, narrower at apex than at 

 base, and wanting the apical areolate area ; pronotum wdth a 

 distinct carination, &c. 



Long. 2 mm. 



Hah. Cape Colony. 



EURYCERA GLABKICORNIS (Tab. VIII., fig. 9). 



Cojnum glabricorne, Montand,, Eevue d'Entom. xi. p. 267 (1892). 



Greyish- brown ; pronotum testaceous-brown ; head, antennae, and 

 sternum, black ; legs testaceous ; antennae robust, second joint 

 shorter than the first, third joint longest, its apex thickened, fourth 

 joint stout, cylindrical ; pronotum finely granulate, with three central 

 greyish carinas, the central one straight and continuous, the two 

 lateral ones anteriorly a little curved and not reaching apex, lateral 

 and anterior margins greyishly carinate, the discal carinations ob- 

 scurely margined with black, the central carination distinctly 

 black before apex ; elytra granulate, obscurely speckled with black, 

 most distinctly so along the lateral margins and on the apical area ; 

 l)ody beneath fuscous; elytra considerably extending beyond the 

 abdominal apex. 



Long. 4^ mm. 



Var. Apical area of the pronotum nearly wholly black. 



Hah. Cape Town (Lightfoot, S. Afr. Mus. and Coll. Dist.) ; 

 Natal ; Durban (Bell — Marley, Brit. Mus.) ; Transvaal ; Zoutpans- 

 berg, Shilouvane (Junod, Brit. Mus.), Eikatla, near Delagoa Bay 

 (Junod). 



I here figure Montaudon's type, kindly lent me by its describer. 

 This appears to be a more melanic form than the ordinary appear- 

 ance of the species as described above. 



