Pheromone glands were discovered in the prothorax of male Hylotrupes bajulus (L.) (Coleoptera : Cerambycidae). These exocrine glands were investigated by SEM and light microscopy. Almost the entire prothorax is internally lined with a glandular matrix composed of numerous heap-like complex glands. Each gland is divided into several subunits ( pore field units ), which in turn are composed of a varying number of glandular units. The glandular unit comprises a distal voluminous glandular cell, a medial (intercalary) canal cell I, and a minute canal cell II near the cuticle. The spindle-like, basally constricted receiving canal of the gland cell leads into the long, non-porous conducting canal, which, by a single cuticle canal, opens in an external pore field, an aggregate of orifices of other such cuticle canals. In varying numbers, these randomly arranged pore fields are located in superficial pits that are distributed over nearly the entire prothorax. The structure of these male sex pheromone glands is discussed in comparison with other known glands in species of Coleoptera characterized by multicellular aggregations and by pore plates.