328 SUPPLEMENT. 
extending upwards to near the large inter-ocular fovea, the depression limited on each side by an oblique 
ridge. Prothorax transverse, convex, sharply margined at the base, rounded at the sides, narrowed and 
constricted in front and also constricted behind ; with a few large foveiform punctures intermixed with a 
close, fine, interstitial punctuation, and also very deeply sulcate down the middle. Scutellum not visible. 
Elytra oblong-oval, convex and narrow in dg, broader in Q ; the seriate punctures coarse and closely placed, 
transverse in 9, the interstices more or less convex throughout. Anterior tibie strongly curved in ¢. 
Length 81-9, breadth 3-32 millim. (3 2 .) 
Hab. Muxico (Boucard, ex coll. Solari: 9), Salazar (Wickham: ¢ , type). 
Very near FE. truquianus, from which it differs in having the frontal fovea much 
larger; the prothorax more convex, deeply sulcate, and with fewer fovee ; the elytra 
more convex in both sexes, the seriate punctures closely placed, and the interstices 
raised throughout. The male (type), recently sent us by Mr. Wickham, is rather worn 
and almost glabrous above, the female is squamose on the apical declivity. E. hoegez, 
from Salazar, based upon a single female example, is a more elongate, less convex form, 
with a feebly impressed rostrum, an obsoletely grooved prothorax, and flat elytral 
interstices. 
Epicerus godmani (p. 124). 
The types of this species (two examples from Popocatepetl) are certainly males, and 
we have also another agreeing with them from Flohr’s duplicates, with a dealer’s label 
“Sierra de Durango” attached. The scattered denticles on the anterior tibie are 
almost obsolete in £. godmani and the allied E. scutellaris. 
Epicerus sexcostatus (p. 125). 
The male of this species is narrower than the female, and it has the metasternum 
and first ventral segment broadly hollowed down the middle. The British Museum 
has recently received a female of it from Vera Cruz, found by Mr. Crawford. Both 
sexes were obtained at Cinco Sefores. 
EPAGRIOPSIS, nomen nov. 
Epagrius, Sharp, antea, p. 128 (nec Schonherr). 
Dr. Sharp in his remarks on Schénherr’s genus EKpagrius says that his application 
of this name may possibly prove to be erroneous, as he had not been able to see 
a specimen of the type, EL. nubilosus. This is actually the case, the type from the 
Sommer collection (kindly lent by Prof. Poulton) proving to be a Bradyrhynchus 
and synonymous with B. tolucew, Sharp. The twenty-one species provisionally placed 
under Hpagrius in this work therefore require a new generic name, for which 
Epagriopsis is suggested ; Bradyrhynchus, Sharp, becomes a synonym of Kpagrius, 
Schénh. In the enumeration of the members of the present genus (anted, pp. 129- 
140) both Epagrius nubilosus (the type) and metallescens were by some oversight 
