188 PHYTOPHAGA.—SUPPLEMENT. 
The antenne in this species are much more elongate and slender than in most other 
species of this genus. The insect is of a pale fulvous colour, with the disc of the 
thorax more or less zeneous (in some specimens the entire head and thorax are of this 
colour); the elytra have frequently the extreme sutural and lateral margins zneous. 
20. Chrysodina (?) granulata. 
Black, the basal joints of the antenne and the legs fulvous, above greenish-seneous ; head and thorax finely 
granulate and sparingly punctured ; elytra very finely punctate-striate, the punctuation obsolete towards 
the apex. 
Length 1} line. 
Head greenish, very minutely granulate and scarcely perceptibly punctured; the clypeus separated from the 
face at the sides by a very fine groove, its lower edge angulate-emarginate, the surface punctured like the 
rest of the head; labrum fulvous, its anterior margin piceous; palpi and the apices of the mandibles 
fulvous; antenne two-thirds the length of the body, the lower six joints fulvous, the rest black, the 
latter strongly thickened ; thorax transverse, scarcely narrowed in front, slightly widened at the middle, 
the sides nearly straight behind, but slightly rounded anteriorly, the posterior angles produced into a 
short point, the surface granulate like that of the head and nearly as finely (but more closely) punctured ; 
scutellum broader than long; elytra moderately convex, parallel, minutely granulate, the punctuation fine 
and somewhat serially arranged (distinct at the base, impressed in fine and scarcely perceptible strie 
towards the apex), the interstices perfectly flat ; prosternum broader than long, punctured ; legs fulvous. 
Hab. Mexico, Chilpancingo in Guerrero (Hége). 
One specimen only of this small species was obtained. The antenne are propor- 
tionately long, and the entire upper surface is finely granulate and finely punctured. 
C. granulata differs from the allied forms in its elongate general shape and in the 
transverse-subquadrate form of the thorax. 
CHALCOPLACIS (p. 111). 
8. Chalcoplacis fulvitarsis. 
Broadly ovate, very convex, metallic green or blue, the antennsz and tarsi fulvous; head and thorax closely 
punctured ; elytra punctate-striate. 
Length 2 lines. 
Head rather opaque, closely punctured throughout, the punctures on the vertex in the form of strige, the 
clypeus bounded above by two raised metallic green spaces; antenne more than half the length of the 
body, fulvous, the terminal joints slightly compressed; thorax three times as broad as long, the sides 
nearly straight at the base, rapidly converging towards the apex from the middle, the anterior angles 
produced beyond the eyes, the surface very closely impressed laterally with somewhat elongate punctures 
(which are here and there confluent and extend quite to the lateral margin), the middle of the disc much 
more remotely punctured ; elytra finely and regularly punctate-striate on the disc, a broader space near 
the lateral margin impunctate, the epipleure nearly flat; underside and legs metallic green or blue, the 
tarsi fulvous. 
Hab. Panama, Volcan de Chiriqui (Champion). 
A single specimen. The closely and somewhat rugosely-punctured head and the 
fulvous tarsi distinguish C. fulvitarsis from any of its allies. 
