CHLAMYS., 157 
from which it scarcely differs except in coloration. The thorax is fulvous at the sides 
behind, or has a small fulvous spot at the middle of the basal margin; the elytra may 
be described as metallic greenish, with the suture and the apex fulvous, this colour | 
extended on either side of the suture towards the base and occupying the inner half of 
the basal margin. 
Chlamys episcopalis (p. 77). 
To the Mexican localities given, add :—Jalapa, Iguala in Guerrero (Hoge). 
Chlamys maculipes (p. 78). — 
To the localities given, add :—Mexico, Cosamaloapam, Playa Vicente (Salle), Acapulco 
and Chilpancingo in Guerrero, Matamoros Izucar in Puebla (Hoge, H. H. Smith), Atoyac 
in Vera Cruz, Teapa in Tabasco (H. H. Smith); Guatemaza, Llano grande (mus. Stutt- 
gart), San Gerénimo (Champion). 
8 (4). Chlamys maculifrons. 
Obscure dark greenish, opaque, pubescent ; the head, the base of the antennzx, a short central stripe in front of 
the thorax, the sides of the pygidium and of the abdomen, and the legs in great part, ferruginous; elytra 
with four or five short tubercles, four discoidal and one subsutural near the apex. 
Length 13-2 lines. 
Hab. Mexico, Ventanas in Durango, Tapachula in Chiapas (Hoge); GuaTEMALa, 
Zapote (Champion). 
Closely allied to C. maculipes, but differing in the much longer and more slender 
antenne and in the shape and colour of the thorax. ‘The thorax (if looked at sideways) 
is depressed anteriorly, and is not so convex and evenly rounded as in the allied species ; 
the two small bare spots at the sides, very distinct in C. macudipes, are absent, and a 
narrow ferruginous longitudinal stripe extends from the centre of the anterior margin 
to about the middle, the anterior margin itself being narrowly ferruginous. ‘The elytra 
are of a very dull opaque greenish-black, rather remotely punctured, and clothed with 
extremely short pubescence (this being more scattered than in C. maculipes); the 
tubercles are very similar to those of C. maculipes. About a dozen specimens were 
obtained, all but one being from Mexico. 
8 (s). Chlamys semilutea. (Tab. XXXIX. fig. 15.) 
Below ferruginous, above obscure dark olive-green ; thorax finely punctured, its sides ferruginous, the elevation 
with a lateral ridge; elytra distinctly punctured, opaque, with longitudinal and short transverse ridges. 
Length 13 line. 
Head bright ferruginous, indistinctly punctured, the vertex with a small elongate obscure blackish spot which 
is divided at its apex; antennz with the fourth and following joints transverse, fuscous, the lower four 
joints fulvous; thorax minutely and closely punctured, the disc gradually raised into a strong elevation 
(this being nearly perpendicular behind and furnished above with an acute oblique ridge which runs halfway 
