i8o 
FASCICULI MALATENSES 
2. Cicendela 'fulig:inosa, Dej. 
Biserat, Jalor. i8th October, 1901. 
The single specimen in the collection was brought in by native children 
among specimens of the preceding species. 
3. Cicendela sumatrensis, Herbst. 
Cape Patani. June, October, 1901. 
Found running about in great numbers just above high-water mark on 
the muddy shores of Patani Bay, and round the edges of freshwater pools on 
Cape Patani. Much scarcer on the seaward face of the same sand-spit, which, 
at one point, is not more than twenty or thirty yards wide, its place being 
seemingly taken by small crabs and by Diptera of different families. 
4. Cicendela minuta, Fabr. 
Sungkel, South Perak. 8th February, 1902. (At light). 
5. Cicendela chlorochila, Chaud. 
Ban Sai Kau, Nawngchik. 26th April, 1901. (At light). 
6, Heptadonta anal is, Fabr. 
Semangko Pass, Selangor- Pahang boundary. 2,500-2,700 feet. May, 1902. 
This brilliant species was found in great abundance on paths running 
through fairly open jungle. I only met with it in one locality, but it is common 
in Singapore and Penang. 
7. ’Tricondyla aptera, OHv. 
Biserat, Jalor. nth July, 1901. 
Mr. Ridley remarks that this beetle has a superficial resemblance to the 
large ant, Camponotiis gigas^ which is known to the Malays as semut gajah 
(elephant ant). 
‘ I took two specimens of this species running about together on sand 
at the foot of a tall tree in open country. Their resemblance to a fossorial 
wasp/ common in the same environment, was so marked that the Malays 
with me begged me not to touch them, remarking that wasps of that 
kind stung very badly. The wasp is frequently seen running about on 
sand, with its wings folded in such a way as to be very inconspicuous. 
. Sphex lobatus, Fabr. 
