CHRYSOGRAMMA.—NOTOZONA. 305 
Head impunctate, the frontal tubercles obsolete, the vertex black, the lower portion pale fulvous ; labrum and 
palpi black ; antenne nearly extending to the end of the elytra, black; thorax twice as broad as long, 
the sides rounded, the anterior angles slightly tuberculiform, the surface very sparingly punctured, 
testaceous, with seven spots placed transversely in two rows; scutellum black; elytra strongly punctured 
in irregular rows, a spot at the shoulder, another immediately below it on the lateral margin, a trans- 
verse mark below the scutellum across the suture, two almost confluent spots on each elytron below the 
middle, and two smaller and more rounded ones near the apex, black; below pale fulvous, a spot on the 
flanks of the thorax and another on the anterior cox black; the femora on their upper edge near the 
apex, and the tibie and tarsi, black; tibiee mucronate; the last abdominal segment of the male deeply 
excavated, the apex in the form of a broad lobe, the anterior edge of which is sinuate. 
Hab. Mexico, Omilteme in Guerrero (A. LT. Smith). 
This species agrees with the preceding in having all the tibis mucronate; it also 
has the elytra very similarly marked, but their punctuation is arranged in irregular 
rows. The antenne are very long; the first joint of the anterior tarsi is broad; the 
excavation of the last abdominal segment in the male is very large, and occupies the 
greater portion of its surface. 
5. Chrysogramma pictipennis. (Tab. XLII. fig. 15.) 
Black, the head fulvous, the basal joints of the antenne and the thorax flavous; elytra very finely and closely 
punctured, flavous, all the margins, a spot at the shoulders, two spots below this, one near the apex, and 
an angulate longitudinal stripe extending from the middle of the disc to the lateral margin, black. 
Var. The elytral spots and stripe more or less coalescent. 
Length 3 lines. 
Head rugose; the frontal elevations distinct, smooth ; clypeus raised, forming a rather broad ridge between 
the antenne; labrum and the basal joints of the palpi black ; antenne extending to about one-third the 
length of the elytra, black, the lower three joints and the apical one fulvous; thorax nearly three times 
broader than long, narrowed in front, the sides nearly straight and narrowly margined, the anterior 
angles obliquely rounded, the surface finely and closely punctured, the interspaces minutely rugose ; 
scutellum broad, black: elytra moderately convex, nearly parallel, very finely punctured, the interspaces 
minutely rugose or wrinkled, flavous, narrowly. margined with black, and with the following black 
markings—a subtriangular spot at the apex and’ another below the shoulders (connected with the lateral 
stripe), a spot on the basal margin, two spots placed one behind the other below the shoulders (the lower 
one larger than the upper.one), a narrow longitudinal stripe extending from the middle of the disc down- 
wards for a little distance and forming an angle where it joins the lateral stripe (the angulate portion 
being much broader than the longitudinal one), and a spot near the suture towards the apex; underside 
and legs black. 
Hab. Mexico, Ventanas in Durango (Hoge). 
— Not unlike C. 8-maculata, Jac., but with the elytra differently marked, and the 
underside and legs black. Fourteen specimens. 
_ NOTOZONA (p. 382). 
Of the five species of Wotozona from Mexico or Honduras described by Clark, four 
have been figured by Mr. Waterhouse in his “ Aid to the Identification of Insects,” 11. 
t. 167—W. elegans (fig. 4), WV. humilis (fig. 5), WN. rufofusca (fig. 6), and N. sparsa 
(fig. 7). It is not unlikely that some of the species described by me under the genus 
BIOL. CENTR.-AMER., Coleopt., Vol. VI. Pt. 1, Suppl., December 1891. 2r 
