68 LONGICORNIA. 
2. Agallissus quadrimaculatus. 
Agallissus quadrimaculatus, White, Cat. Long. Col. B. M. i. p. 6], t. 3. £. 2". 
Hab. Honpvras (Dyson 1). 
3. Agallissus clytoides. 
Angustior, postice angustatus, pilosus, subeneo-niger ; elytris nigro-violaceis, apice valde obtuso serratis, utrinque 
maculis quatuor croceis, viz. 1* vitteformi prope scutelium, 2? rotundata marginali, 3* mediana ovata, et 
4* longe ante apicem transversa, fere divisa; capite thoraceque lateribus cinereo-pubescentibus, hoc 
breviter subcylindrico, medio rotundato, sparsim punctulato, linea dorsali brevi; elytris passim sparse 
punctulatis ; pedibus piceo-rufis, femoribus apice tibiisque basi nigris. 
Long. 62 lin. 
Hab. Mexico (Boucard). 
Possibly the A. clytoides, Dej. Cat., a species which has never been described, except 
with regard to its general form in a note by Lacordaire (Gen. Col. ix. p. 1384); and in 
that respect the present insect agrees with it. The elytra are much smoother than in 
A. melaniodes. 
4. Agallissus gratus. 
Agallissus gratus, Leconte, Smithson. Misc. Coll. no. 265, pt. i. P. 821°. 
Cryptopleura grata, Haldeman, sec. Leconte loc. cit. 
Hab. North America, Texas }.—NorrHern Mexico}. 
ANCYLOCERA. 
Ancylocera, Serville, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1834, p. 107. 
Peculiar to America, ranging from the Argentine Republic in the south to the 
middle States in the north. Eight species have been described. 
1. Ancylocera macrotela. 
Ancylocera rugicollis, Bates, Trans. Ent. Soc. 1872, p. 191 (nec Fab.). 
A. bicolor Ol. (=rugicollis, Fab.) simillima, sed differt antennarum articulo undecimo elongato, apice solum 
hamato, necnon elytrorum apice extus angulato. Nigra, elytris abdomineque rubris; thorace punctato 
et transversim rugato ; elytris crebre dorso seriatim punctatis. 
Long. 5-6 lin. § 9. 
Hab. Guatema.a, 8S. Gerénimo (Champion); Nicaragua, Chontales (Belt). 
Very closely resembling the North-American A. rugicollis, Fab. (=bicolor, Oliv.), 
differing from that species chiefly by the greater length of the eleventh joint of the 
antenne in the male (the terminal joints were wanting in the example I formerly - 
determined as A. rugicollis). In A. rugicollis, as in A. cardinalis, the eleventh joint 
in the male is excessively short, and forms a slightly curved hook; but in A. macrotela 
it is more than half the length of the tenth joint, and the hook is formed by the 
