452 SUPPLEMENT. 
legs shorter and stouter, the thorax not so smooth, the elytra more shining, &c. The 
elytral sculpture resembles that of S. nodulosa, but the punctures of the alternate 
interstices do not bear long, erect hairs. 
63 (a). Statira flohri. 
Moderately elongate, rather depressed, very shining, piceous or pitchy brown, the head and the base and apex 
of the prothorax ferruginous in one example, the elytra metallic green, seneous or cupreo-sneous at the 
tip. Head very finely, sparsely punctured, the eyes comparatively small and very widely separated in 
the female, larger in the male ; antenns rufo-testaceous, long, very slender, thickening outwardly, the 
apical joint in the female about three times as long as the preceding one (in the male broken off); 
prothorax as long as broad, very finely margined at the sides, the latter a little rounded anteriorly, the 
anterior angles obtuse, the disc transversely depressed on either side behind the middle, the surface very 
finely, sparsely punctured’ elytra moderately long, transversely depressed below the base, finely and 
rather deeply striate, the stria with exceedingly closely placed fine punctures, the interstices almost flat, 
the first with four (near the apex), the third, fifth, seventh, and ninth each with from six to eight (widely 
scattered) rather fine punctures ; beneath almost smooth: legs long and slender, pitchy-brown, the tarsi 
paler, the femora and tibie with a few very long, scattered, projecting hairs. 
Length 9-10, breadth 3-33 millim. (¢ 9.) 
Hab. Mexico, Juquila (Lohr). 
Two specimens, the male with mutilated antenne. This species resembles 
S. ewrata, but it has longer and much more slender antenne, smaller eyes, &c The 
femora and tibiz bear a few very long projecting hairs, and S. flohri, following the 
arrangement here adopted, should be placed near S. pilipes and its allies, from all of 
which it differs in the completely margined thorax. The long hairs on the femora 
and tibie are easily abraded. 
Mr Flohr informs me that he has also met with this insect at Cerro de Plumas. 
ANISOXYA. (To follow the genus Dircea, p. 85.) 
Anisoxya, Mulsant, Col. Fr., Barbipalpes, p. 45 (1856) ; Lacordaire, Gen. Col. v. p. 551. 
Two species only of this genus are known, both of rare occurrence, one from Europe 
and one from North America; a third is now added from Mexico. 
1. Anisoxya vagans. 
Piceous, thickly clothed with fine decumbent greyish pubescence ; the entire upper surface densely, minutely 
punctate and transversely aciculate. Palpi obscure testaceous, the last joint of the maxillary pair 
moderately stout, subtriangular; antenne short, about reaching the base of the prothorax, black, with 
joints 1 and 2 testaceous, these joints stout and subequal, 3 narrower and a little shorter than 2, 4-11 
broader, 6-10 transverse, 11 much longer than 10, oval; prothorax broader than long, rapidly narrowing 
from about the basal third, bisinuate at the base; legs fusco-testaceous, the apical joint of the tarsi 
yellow ; the spurs of the middle tibiee much longer than those of the hind tibize, unequal, the inner one very 
elongate; penultimate joint of all the tarsi very short and narrow, slightly produced beneath the apical joint. 
Length 4 millim. 
Hab. Mexico, Yolos in Oaxaca (Sal/é). 
