LONGICORN COLEOPTERA OF NEW ZEALAND. 
27 
Species VIII.— Cerambyx strigipennisy ‘Wcstw. (Plate 56, fig. 6). 
C. sordide luteus, piceo longitudinaliter striatuS) ttoracis dorso et lateribus tuberculatis, 
antennU nigro annulatis, pedibus gracilibus palJidis. 
Long, corp, lin, 11, 
Habitat Port Nicholson, New Zealand. Mus, Parry. 
The head is broad in front before the eyes, and with the face 
rather oblique (fig. 6 a), and truncate, and the parts of the mouth 
are small; the mandibles short (fig. 6b), and black at the tip; 
the palpi also short, the maxillary ones scarcely longer than the 
labial (fig. 6 c) ; the antennee are shorter than the body, with the 
first joint olavate, the third and several following of nearly equal 
length, with the base of the joints black; the head has a dark 
central line, and the space behind the eyes is also dark-coloured; 
the thorax is constricted near the front margin, and dilated on 
each side into a short, thick, conical spine ; the disk has also four 
elevated tubercles, placed thus, ; the middle of the thorax is 
marked with a dark line. The elytra are long and nearly parallel, 
with the suture and five longitudinal streaks on each, of pitchy- 
brown ; the first not extending to the base, the second and fourth 
united together near the tip, the third being insulated by them, 
the fourth much abbreviated at the base, and the fifth slender and 
submarginal; the feet are slender and simple, the femora being 
very slightly olavate. 
Species IX.— Stenoderus jS'tnc/airi (Plato 56, fig. 3, and 3 a, head seen laterally). S. 
prasino-viridis gericeo-opacus, pedibus antennisque rufis, thoraco ntrinque spina armato, 
elytris tenuissime punctatia ot flavido marginatis disco sub-bicostatis, abdomine piceo- 
rufescenti. 
Long. corp. lin, 4^. 
Syn. —Callichroma {CalUprason) Sinclairi, White, op. cit. p. 277. 
Habitat New Zealand, D. Sinclair. lUus. Brit. 
The eyes are very large and nearly rounded; the antennse are 
11-jointed, slender, with the first joint long and clavate, the terminal 
joints rather thicker than the preceding; the thorax is narrowed 
both behind and before the middle, where it is armed on each side 
with a spine. 
Mr. White considers this insect as a new sub-genus, near to 
PromeceSy Serville, and as one of the links connecting the Ceram- 
bycidse with the Lepturidse, 
Species X.—Xglotoles grisevs, (Plate 56, fig. 2.) X. griseus scutelli margine elytrisque 
lineolis aliquot brcvissimis flavidis; basi punctis iinpressis apice vix acuminatie, pcdibus 
fuscis femoribus clavatis antennisque fuscis. 
Long. coip. lin. 4^. 
Habitat New Zealand, Mus. Banhs ct Mus. Brit. 
gYN.— Saperda grtsea^ Fabricius, Syst. Ent. 186; Ent. Syst. 1, 2, 313 ; Syst, El. 2, 324. 
Xylotoles griseus^ V^hite, op. cit. 
