PSEUDOCLYTEA. 
101 
fuscous, as loug as the thorax, the basal four joints fulvous. 
Thorax twice as broad as long, narrowed in front, the sides 
straight, the posterior angles rounded, the median lobe only indi- 
cated, the disc entirely impunctate. Scutellum large, triangular. 
Elytra feebly lobed below the shoulders at the margins, with traces 
of two or three short sulci near the apex, when seen in certain 
lights ; each elytron with a large subtriangular black patch on the 
lateral margin near the apex. The female has shorter legs and a 
shallow fovea on the last abdominal segment. 
Length 8-10 mm. 
Hob. Malabar. 
In most specimens the base of the femora is more or less 
fulvous. This is a large species, much resembling one belonging 
to the genus Chjtra. 
Genus PSEUDOCLYTEA, nov. 
Type, P. andrewesi, Jac., from Western India. 
Lange. India. 
. Elongate and subcylindical ; head normal ; eyes large ; 
antennae rather robust, third joint much smaller than second, 
fourth trigonal, following joints very strongly transversely widened. 
Thorax half as broad again as long, sides rounded, slightly narrowed 
in front, very narrowly margined, basal margin with median lobe 
broad, very slightly produced and truncate. Scutellum very broad, 
triangular. Elytra elongate, covering the pygidium, sides without 
humeral produced lobes ; epipleurae clothed with long pubescence. 
Anterior legs elongate, their tarsi also longer than ordinary, 
furnished like the underside with long pubescence. 
This genus is proposed for two species from India that have the 
general appearance of Clytrci , but belong to the group that possesses 
elongate anterior legs and tarsi ; the long pubescence of the elytral 
epipleurae and of the tarsi is not found in any other genus of the 
Clytrince. 
180. Pseudoclytra andrewesi, Jac. (Titu- 
boea) Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg. xxxix, 1895, 
p. 258. 
Entirely of fulvous colour. 
Head depressed between the eyes, 
closely punctured and longitudinally stri- 
gose, anterior edge of clypeus angularly 
emarginate, apex of mandibles black ; 
antennae fulvous, third joint small, fourth 
broader, following joints strongly trans- 
verse. Thorax less than twice as broad as 
long, slightly narrowed anteriorly, pos- 
terior angles strongly rounded, median 
lobe scarcely produced, surface impunc- 
tate with the exception of some small punctures placed on the 
