330 SUPPLEMENT. 
In addition to the two specimens from Toluca mentioned by Dr. Sharp, I have seen 
three others found by Truqui and the types of the insects described by Boheman, 
E. metallescens being a large, somewhat abraded, submetallic example of the same 
species. The common, Y-shaped, fuscous-edged, white mark on the apical declivity of 
the elytra and the white oblique fascia on the outer part of the disc before the middle 
are conspicuous in all of them. Length 6-74, breadth 23-33 mm. 
3. Epagrius rugicollis. (Tab. XV. fig. 14, 2.) 
Bradyrhynchus rugicoliis, antea p. 142. 
Epicerus notatus (2°) and punctaticollis (3), E. Dugés, in litt. 
There are two examples of this species (described from an abraded female) in the 
U.S. National Museum, doubtless from the same locality as the type, Guanajuato. One 
of these additional specimens, the female figured, is in fairly good condition; it has 
two sinuous vitte on the disc and a stripe on each side of the prothorax, and a patch at 
the sides and a common broad, angulate, subapical fascia on the elytra, cinereous. 
4, Epagrius retrorsus, sp.n. (Tab. XV. figg. 15, 15 a.) 
Oblong-obovate, black, the antennz (the club excepted) and tarsi more or less ferruginous; densely clothed 
with pale brown and white scales, the white scales on the prothorax condensed into a narrow, faint, 
curved stripe on each side, and those on the elytra into two sharply defined, rather broad, angulate 
fascie—the anterior one not reaching the suture and extending forward along the outer margin to 
the shoulder, the subapical one extending for some distance down the suture; the surface also some- 
what thickly set with short, stout, curved setw. Head transversely depressed between the eyes 
(appearing sharply separated from the rostrum), the rostrum short, the eyes prominent, the antennal 
club ovate and rather short. Prothorax transverse, rounded at the sides ; coarsely, somewhat closely 
punctate, and faintly canaliculate. LElytra at the base a little wider than the prothorax, retuse or 
perpendicular on the apical declivity (as seen in profile), the seriate punctures scattered and very con- 
spicuous, the interstices rather convex. 
Length 5-6, breadth 23-22 millim. 
Hab. Mexico (Mus. Brit. ; Trugut, in coll. Fry). 
Five specimens, sex not ascertained. Not unlike FE. nudilosus (=toluce, Sharp), 
but strongly setose, and with the apical declivity perpendicular, the prothorax more 
closely punctured, and the head transversely depressed between the eyes. L. rugicollis 
(Sharp) has very short, fine, inconspicuous sete and the apical declivity rounded, 
though agreeing with L. retrorsus in the form of the head. The Guatemalan Epicerus 
_gninor, too, is not unlike the present species, but it has depressed eyes, erect sete, and 
an unimpressed head. 
CLEISTOLOPHUS (p. 143). 
Cleistolophus subfasciatus (p. 143). 
To the localities given, add :—Mexico, Oaxaca (Mus. Brit.). 
The Guatemalan example referred to this species seems to belong to ©. similis. 
