542 SUPPLEMENT. 
SCAPTES (p. 222). 
1. Scaptes tropicus. 
Asida tropica, Kirsch, Berl. ent. Zeitschr. 1866, p. 190°. 
Scaptes sqgamulatus, huj. op. p. 222, Tab. X. figg. 6, 6a, 6 (1886) °. 
Ulus squamulatus, Fleut. & Sallé, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1889, p. 422°. 
To the localities given, add :—Cotompia, Bogota!; ANTILLES, Guadaloupe °. 
There can be little doubt that the above synonymy is correct, though Kirsch does 
not mention the form of the head, antenne, &c., and the insect bears no relation to 
Asida. The elytra, as well as the thorax, are fimbriate at the sides. MM. Fleutiaux 
and Sallé? sink Scaptes as synonymous with Ulus, Horn, which it resembles in the 
shape of the anterior tibie; Scaptes, however, has the head, antenne, thorax, and 
prosternum differently formed, and the eyes not entirely divided. It would, perhaps, 
be better placed in the Opatrides. 
GONIADERA (p. 229). 
Goniadera alternata (p. 231). 
Mr. Flohr informs me that this insect occurs at Atoyac in the State of Vera Cruz. 
ZEMYMONE. (To precede the genus Anedus, p. 233.) 
4imymone, F. Bates, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1868, p. 314 nota. 
This generic name * was proposed by Mr. F. Bates for the South-American Gonia- 
dera cariosa, Fairm. Aimymone chiefly differs from Anewdus in having the thorax sub- 
truncate at the base (without median lobe) and the elytra crenate-striate, and from 
Goniadera in having the penultimate joint of the tarsi lamellate beneath. A single 
species from Mexico, specimens of which have recently been forwarded to me by 
Mr. Flohr, belongs to it. 4. crenata has much the facies of an Adelium. 
1. Amymone crenata. (Tab. XXIII. fig. 5.) 
Elongate-oval, moderately broad, rather depressed, seneous, shining. Head very coarsely, irregularly punctate, 
broadly transversely depressed in front ; the eyes coarsely granulated, widely separated, moderately large ; 
antenne pitchy-brown, about reaching the base of the prothorax, joint 3 about three times the length of 
2 and a little longer than 4, 4-10 gradually decreasing in length, 10 transverse, 11 much longer and 
stouter than 10; prothorax transversely convex, nearly twice as broad as long, a little wider at the base 
than at the apex, widest at the middle, the sides rounded anteriorly and strongly constricted behind, the 
apex moderately deeply emarginate, the anterior angles rounded, the hind angles rectangular, the base 
subtruncate, without distinct lateral sinuation, the surface with scattered, irregularly arranged, coarse 
punctures ; elytra much wider than, and about three and a half times as long as, the prothorax, subparallel 
towards the base, deeply and moderately coarsely crenate-striate, the interstices feebly convex, smooth ; 
* Omitted from the Munich Catalogue. 
