340 SUPPLEMENT. 
Clerus atriceps (p. 161). 
The specimen figured (Tab. VIII. fig. 21) is from Capetillo; others from the State of 
Panama, recorded as a variety (antea, p. 161), I now separate, no typical examples of 
C. atriceps having been found with them. 
41 (a). Clerus villicus. 
Clerus atriceps, var., antea, p. 161. 
Pallide ochraceus; capite elytrorumque maculis quatuor magnis nigris; elytris perobsolete punctatis. Long. 
8 millim. 
Hab. Panama, Bugaba, Volcan de Chiriqui 2000 to 4000 feet (Champion). 
This species is a near ally of C. atriceps, and differs from it in being of a paler yellow 
colour, with the elytral black fascie much reduced in breadth and interrupted at 
the suture, and in fresh examples edged with pale yellow, almost white. The elytra are 
also much less punctured. The examples sent by Mr. Champion are all very uniform 
in size and colour, and have the head black. 
Clerus nigripes (p. 164). 
To the synonymy given, add :— 
Clerus (Thanasimus) repandus, Horn, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soe. il. p. 342°. 
Hab. Nortu America, United States, California .— Mexico, Sonora}. 
I cannot consider this as more than another variety of C. nigripes, Say. Dr. Horn 
says it is closely allied to C. trifasciatus, Say, which species White in the ‘ Catalogue of 
Cleridee of British Museum’ considered to be only a variety of C. nigripes. 
EPIPHLEUS (p. 166). 
1 (a). Epiphleus princeps. (Tab. XII. fig. 19.) 
Rufus, cinereo-sericeus, punctatus ; prothorace piceo, lateribus dense sericeo-pubescentibus; elytris postice sericeo 
micantibus, singulis fascia lata ad suturam interrupta, maculaque magna subapicali triangulari, suturam 
non attingente, maculam parvam sericeam includente, nigris; pedibus rufis, femoribus posticis, tibiis 
externe, infuscatis. Long. 10-11 millim. 
Hab. Panama, Bugaba 1000 feet (Champion). 
Head dark chestnut-red, thickly and almost rugosely punctured ; antenne with the 
long, curved broad joint yellow, the intermediate joints black, and the club fuscous ; 
tips of the mandibles black. Thorax thickly but finely punctured, more distinctly so 
at the front, which is red, the rest of its disc being black ; there is a delicate line of 
ashy hairs in the centre, and the sides are densely clothed with silky and shining ashy 
hairs, enclosing a denuded spot; these hairs lie pointing forwards, but in some lights 
appear to radiate from the black spot they enclose. Elytra deeply impressed with series 
ot coarse punctures in the basal half; the first black patch or fascia is placed before 
