522 SUL! FAMILY XII. COSSOXINJE. 



II. GOXOXOTUS Lee., 1876. (Gr., "angle" + "back.") 



Small oblong-oval, very coarsely sculptured species having the 

 beak rather slender, nearly as long as thorax, moderately curved, 

 very coarsely, rugosely punctured ; antennal grooves lateral, deep, 

 extending to the lower corner of the eyes; antenna? inserted at 

 apical third, scape slender, reaching the eye, first joint of fnnicle 

 stout, obconical, slightly longer than second, the latter equal to 

 the next two; club small, oval, annulated, thinly pubescent; front 

 coxa* narrowly, middle ones moderately, hind ones very widely 

 separated ; first, second and fifth ventral segments long, third 

 and fourth united equal to fifth ; tarsi short, stout, third joint 

 broader, bilobed, hairy beneath. 



819 (9019). GONONOTUS ANCULICOLLIS Suffiv, 1872, 181. 



Dull pitchy black, without lustre, usually clothed with a thin crust of 

 dark color; antenna and tarsi reddish-brown. Head very coarsely, rugosely 

 punctured. Thorax about as long as wide, sides bisinuate and suddenly 

 constricted far behind the apex, thus causing two lateral protuberances, 

 one near base, the other more prominent in front of middle; disc uneven, 

 with three feeble carina?, coarsely granulate, each granule with a central 

 puncture. Elytra elongate-oval, slightly wider than thorax; striae wide, 

 shallow, very coarsely punctate; intervals narrow, carinate, alternately a 

 little more elevated. Beneath very coarsely punctured. Length 2.5 3.7 

 mm. 



Dunedin, Florida, Jan. 21 April 1. Common on beach of 

 Clearwater Ray, 05 specimens having been taken at one time be- 

 neath a partly rotten board. Haulover, Fla., March 16. Jupiter, 

 Key West, Biscayne Bay, Lake Worth and St. Lucie, Fla. Known 

 also from Cuba. Maritime, living in larval and adult stages in old 

 boards and roots, washed up on the shores. (Rilri/.} Described 

 from Florida as (1. liitnsus and placed in Calandrida* by LeConte. 

 but previously described from Cuba as a member of the genus 

 AncJiciuiN by Suffrian, as pointed out by Schwarz. (1893, 53.) 



III. TYIMILOGLYMMA Dury, 1901. (Or., "blind" -)- "engraved.") 



Body stout, subcylindrical, slightly depressed; eyes wanting; 

 beak thick, curved, coarsely punctured, three-fourths as long as 

 thorax, strongly constricted at base; antennal grooves deep, be- 

 ginning at apical fourth, gradually becoming inferior; scape not 

 reaching constriction at base of beak, funicle T-jointed, the first 

 longest, the others subequal, gradually wider; club round, pubes- 

 cent; thorax squarely truncate at base and nearly so at apex; 

 scutellum very minute; elytra elongate-oval, conjointly rounded 



