16,2 Schultze: Contribution to Coleo'ptera Fauna 199 
tured, rufescent and whitish tomentose with irregularly scat- 
tered bare spots. Elytra irregularly punctured, confluent pale 
rufescent and white tomentose. 
Length, 27.5 millimeters ; width, 8.7. 
Panay, Antique, Culasi (R. C. McGregor). Type in my 
collection. 
This species is easily distinguished by its much stouter form 
and larger size from the other Philippine representatives of 
this genus. 
Chlorisanis benguetanus sp. nov. Plate 1, flg. 2. 
Dark metallic blue. Head sparsely and scatteredly punctured. 
Antennae dark blue. Prothorax irregularly and scatteredly punc- 
tured. Discal area with two small roundish and an oblong cal- 
losity, the latter in the basal half. Elytra very densely and 
coarsely punctured, the punctures growing less toward apex. 
Lateral margins abruptly set off by a carina. Subsutural and 
apical areas finely pubescent, apical end of each elytron with two 
obtuse spines. Margins of apical fourth beset with rather long 
black setae. Underside glossy green, finely whitish pubescent. 
Femora rufescent-ochraceous, glossy ; tibiae and tarsi black, 
pubescent, and setose, more pronounced on the posterior legs. 
Length, 17 millimeters; width, 4.5. 
Luzon, Benguet, Baguio (F. Sanchez, S. J.) Type in my 
collection. 
From C. viridis Pascoe,® the type of the genus from Sarawak, 
the above species is easily distinguished by the rufescent-ochra- 
ceous femora. 
Pachyrrhynchus erosus sp. nov. 
Black, glossy ; elytra with a series of fine longitudinal grooves, 
which form loops as in Macrocyrtus erosus Pasc. Head with 
rostrum in the basal half strongly depressed with a scale spot 
which is divided by a longitudinal groove extending to the front. 
Prothorax subglobular with a strongly pronounced anterior and 
a posterior submarginal groove. Elytra with nine or ten longi- 
tudinal grooves, respectively, one at the suture being common 
to both elytra, closely beset with creamy white scales, the grooves 
forming five loops. The shortest loop is located subsuturally, 
the others extend from near the base to the apical fourth. Near 
the apex and subsuturally another short oblong loop and at the 
apical triangle a triangular loop. Legs with a scale spot at the 
femora apically. 
* Pascoe, Trans. Ent. Soc. London III 3 (1867) 413, pi. 16, fig. 7. 
