528 CUCUJIDE. 
34. Leemophleus recticollis. 
Lemophieus recticollis, Reitter, Col. Hefte, xv. p. 52 (1876) (part.) °. 
Oblongus, deplanatus, tenuissime pubescens, rufus, nitidus; capite thoraceque picescentibus, sat crebre et 
fortiter, fere equaliter punctatis ; elytris subtiliter sex-striatis. 
Long. 2 millim. 
Mas, antenne articulo primo plus minusve elongato, interdum valde elongato, sinuato, apicem versus incras- 
sato, apice in processu curvato producto. 
Hab. British Honpuras, Rio Sarstoon (Blancaneaux); GuateMALA, Cubilguitz in 
Vera Paz (Champion).—CotomBia, San Carlos 1. 
This species is distinguished from L. tteratus and L. addendus by its broader form, 
darker colour, thicker antenne, and slight differences in the sculpture; the basal 
joint of the antenna of the female is both longer and thicker than it is in those species. 
The head and thorax are evenly, rather finely punctured. The thorax has a rather 
broad elevation in front of the scutellum, and there are two fine raised strize on each 
side, the outer of the two not quite reaching the base; it is much broader than long, 
nearly straight at the sides, with the hind angles rectangular. The broad, short elytra 
are rounded at the tip; each has three fine strie—one near the suture, the other two 
equidistant from the very fine costa that forms a margin, outside which the sides are 
abruptly deflexed and perpendicular. 
Twenty-three specimens—three from the Rio Sarstoon, twenty from Cubilguitz. 
I am indebted to M. René Oberthiir for sending me Reitter’s types of L. uncicornis 
and L. recticollis for examination. ‘The former comes from Surinam, and appears to 
be very closely allied to JZ. iteratus, but I cannot at present consider it identical 
therewith *. The types of L. recticollis consist of specimens of L. iteratus and the 
present species; I assign the name to the form marked “type,” which comes from 
the Steinheil collection and was found at Medellin. I have very little doubt that it 
is a female of the species of which both sexes were found by Mr. Champion in 
Guatemala. 
35. Lemophleus iteratus, sp.n. (Tab. XVI. figg. 25, ¢; 25, a, 0, c, head 
and antenne of smaller males; 26, head and antenne of @ .) 
Oblongus, angustus, deplanatus, tenuissime pubescens, rufo-testaceus, nitidus; capite prothoraceque rufis, parce, 
subtiliter fere eequaliter punctatis ; elytris subtiliter sex-striatis. 
Long. 14 millim. 
Mas, antenne articulo primo plus minusve elongato, interdum valde elongato, sinuato, apicem versus 
incrassato, apice in processu curvato, producto. 
* A large series of L. cteratus, found in the Islands of St. Vincent and Grenada, was named Microbrontes 
uncicornis, Reitter, by M. Grouvelle (cf. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1898, p. 405); but none of them agree 
satisfactorily with Reitter’s type, which is a more elongate, rather less depressed insect, with the base of the 
thorax strongly elevated in front of the scutellum. 
