446 



P. Cameron, 



[14] 



keels stouter than usual; the areola large, reaching from 

 near the base to near the apex; the base narrowed to a 

 point, from where it becomes gradually widened to the 

 middle, becomiug then narrowed to the apex, at which the 

 keels do not touch; on the sides are 2 large arese, the 

 inner is widest at the base, through being bounded by the 

 oblique keels of the areola; the outer is large, oblique and 

 is of equal width; there are 2 large arese with a rounded 

 outer edge on the apieal slope, bounding the areola; the 

 areae are irregularly striated. $ 



Length 5 mm. 



Caffraria (Krebs). 



Antennse 34— jointed, the flagellum covered with a close 

 stiff pile. Parapsidal furrows deep, crenulated. Pleural 

 furrows weakly crenulated. The furrows bordering the 

 raised central part of the l st abdominal segment narrower 

 than it. The parts bordering the sides of the scutellum are 

 reticulated. The long spur of the hinder tibise is three- 

 fourths of the leugth of the metatarsus. 



Allied to C. testaceipes, Cam. Cf. Trans. S. Afr. Phil. 

 Soc, XVI, 331. It has the nervures and stigma black, and 

 there is a well-marked distinction in the form of the 

 metanotal area : in forticarinatus it becomes gradually 

 narrowed from the dilated centre to the apex, and from 

 the centre to the base, the 2 parts being of almost equal 

 length; in testaceipes its base is broadly rounded, and it 

 becomes gradually narrowed from the basal fourth to the 

 apex, the keels, too, not being so strougly developed as 

 they are in forticarinatus. 



Cardiochelis rufomaculatus, sp. nov. 



Black, a spot, rounded on the inner side, on the orbits 

 opposite the antennse, a broad line on the outer orbits, ex- 

 tending from the top to shortly below the middle of the 

 eyes, a line on the base of the propleurse, tegulae and the 

 abdomen, rufo-testaceous, the abdomen paler at the base 

 and darker at the apex ; the legs coloured like the abdomen, 

 the coxse, except uarrowly at the apex, and the hinder tarsi, 



