464 Mr. C. J. Galian on new Longicorn Coleoptera . 
yellow, with a whitish pubescence. Prosternal process 
simple ; mesosternal obtusely tubercled near its posterior end. 
Eumimetes albisparsus , sp. n. 
Piceo-fuseus, pube grisea subtiliter obtectus ; elytris maculis parvis 
albescentibus dispersis singulisque scopulis rotundatis pilorum 
nigrorum duobus — uno humerali, altero medio paullo pone basin. 
Long. ( 3 ) 18, ( 2 ) 21 mm. 
Hob . Imerina Mountains. 
Dark brown, with a faint greyish pubescence. Prothorax 
almost impunctate, with a very short fringe of whitish hairs 
to the anterior and posterior borders, with a moderately strong 
tubercle on each side. Scutellum bordered with a white 
pubescence posteriorly. Elytra sparsely and strongly enough 
punctured, clothed with a faint greyish pubescence, and with 
numerous small scattered whitish spots ; each with two small 
rounded tufts of black hairs, of which one is at the shoulder, 
the other placed a little distance from the base on the middle 
of the disk. Breast and abdomen with some minute scattered, 
glabrous, and shining spots, each surrounding a shallow 
puncture. Antennae in the male about a third longer than 
the body, in the female barely surpassing the elytra. 
This species seems to be undoubtedly congeneric with 
Eumimetes sparsus , Klug, notwithstanding the tufts of hairs 
on the elytra and the somewhat stronger tubercles to the 
prothorax. In Eumimetes also must, 1 think, be placed E. 
burner alis , Vollenh. {Phymasterna) , for which Phymasterna 
seocpunciata , Fairm., is probably a synonym. 
Stenosoma apzcalis y sp. n. 
Griseo leviter pubescens, brunneo-variegata ; prothorace utrinque 
minute tuberculato ; elytris elongatis, angustis, paralleiis, ad 
suturam longitudinaliter subcanaliculatis, apicibus troncatis, 
angulis externis bre viter spinosis ; an tennis corpore longioribns, 
subtus sparsissime ciliatis, seapo quam articulo tertio loagiore. 
Long. 7-10, lat. 2-2| mm. 
Hab. Antananarivo ( Kingdon ). 
Unless a special genus is formed for its reception this 
species must, I think, remain in Stenosoma . It has com- 
pletely the aspect of species of this genus, differing chiefly by 
the more elongate scape of the antennae and the external 
spines to the apices of the elytra. In a specimen with the 
antennae not much longer than the body, which I suppose to 
be a female, there is no excavation at the apex of the abdo- 
men. 
