RHYNCHOPHORA: OTIORHYNCHIN®. 333 
PANTOMORUS (p. 152). 
Aramigus and Phacepholis, Horn, Proc. Am. Phil. Soc. xv. pp. 98, 95 (1875). 
Amongst the thirty-two Central-American species placed by Dr. Sharp under 
Pantomorus (type P. albosignatus, Boh.) some, P. longulus, P. distans, &c., have the 
tips of the hind tibie furnished with, at most, a double row of fimbrie (= Aramiqus, 
Horn); others, nos. 25-50, &c., have the tips of the hind tibie dilated into an oval 
enclosed scaly space (= Pantomorus, Schénh., sensu stricto, and Phacepholis, Horn) ; 
others. again are intermediate in this respect, and Horn’s genus Aramigus would 
therefore be better sunk under Pantomorus*. P. globicollis, the type of Athetetes, 
Pascoe, has the tips of the hind tibiz squamose as in Phacepholis, and the second 
ventral segment of the male armed with two or three small transversely placed 
tubercles. The males of Phacepholis elegans and P. candida, Horn (if the insects 
sent me under these names by the U.S. National Museum are correctly named), have 
similar tubercles on the second ventral segment (elegans, 5, and candida, 2), though 
this character is not mentioned by the American author; Pierce, too, in his recent 
revision of the genus Phacepholis |Journ. icon. Ent. iii. p. 8363 (1910)] appears to have 
also overlooked them. 
Pantomorus albosignatus (p. 153). 
To the Mexican localities given, add:— Chihuahua city, Guadalupe, Distrito 
Federal (Wickham), Hidalgo (Barrett, in U.S. Nat. Mus.), Mescala (H. H. Smith), 
Oaxaca (Mus. Brit.), Cordova (fige). 
Mr. Wickham has recently sent us numerous fresh examples of this insect from 
Chihuahua, Durango, and Guadalupe. ‘There is no record of it as yet from north of 
the Mexican frontier. 
4 (a). Pantomorus fulleri. (Tab. XV. fig. 19.) 
Aramigus fulleri, Horn, Proc. Am. Phil. Soc. xv. p. 94; Pierce, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. xxxvii. 
p- 861°. 
Pantomorus olinde, Perkins, Fauna Hawaiiensis, Coleopt. i. p. 130 (1909) *. 
Hab. Norra America, New Jersey !, Montana!, Georgia ®, California, &c.—Mexico, 
Guanajuato (Dugés, in Mus. Brit.; U.S. Nat. Mus.). 
Specimens of this destructive insect were sent by Dr. Dugés, of Guanajuato, to the 
British Museum in 1901, and its real home may be in Mexico, the species having 
perhaps been introduced into the United States, as well as into the Hawaiian Islands °. 
* Faust has referred a Venezuelan insect to Phacepholis, P. albaria. 
+ The other Central-American forms (of which the males are known) possessing this character are 
P. brevipes, annectens, albicans, and viridicans, Sharp, and a new species described below. 
