30 FAMILY II. ANTIIRIBIDJE. 



each sub-equal in length to first; 9 11 forming an elongate, sub- 

 cylindrical club; scutellum small, elevated, with a small deep 

 fovea behind. 



13 (9203). GONOTROPIS GIBBOSUS Lee., 1876, 394. 



Subovate, convex. Black without lustre; beak, sides of head below the 

 eyes and scutellum densely clothed with fine white pubescence; elytra 

 with a large saddle-shaped spot of similar pubescence extending from the 

 middle forward to base and gradually narrowed to the space between the 

 third intervals; also with some smaller white and black pubescent spaces 

 behind the middle; beneath pruinose with fine whitish pubescence. Thorax 

 narrowed from the base forward, broadly channeled behind the middle and 

 with a short, deep transverse line at the middle, the edges of the cruciform 

 impression thus produced clothed with white pubescence; disc broadly 

 concave near the sides adjacent to the transverse ridge. Elytra wider 

 than base of thorax; striae finely punctate; intervals densely and finely 

 punctured, the third with an oblong tubercle near base and another behind 

 the middle. Length 5 mm. 



Paris, Maine, July 4. Tyngsboro, Mass. ; Blanchard collection. 

 Described from (Colorado. Known also from Minnesota and 

 Montreal, Canada, northward to Cumberland House in Hudson 

 Bay Region. Rare in collections. 



VI. EURYMYCTER Lee., 1870. (Gr., "broad" -+- "nose.") 



Oblong, robust, coarsely sculptured species having the beak 

 narrower ilian head, strongly dilated at tip, with three ridges 

 and four wide grooves above; eyes rounded, finely granulated; 

 auteunal fovea* deep, visible only from above; antenna? half as 

 long as body, first and second joints stouter, nearly equal, 3 S 

 slender, longer, shining, 11 forming an elongate loose club; 

 first and fifth ventral segments longer than the others. One 

 species is known. 



14 (9204). ETKYMYCTER FASCIATUS Oliv., 1795, 80, p. 9. 



Dark or sooty brown with a conspicuous patch of white pubescence on 

 the beak and a broad transverse band of same behind the middle of elytra. 

 Thorax very uneven, broadly impressed before the middle; ante-basal ridge 

 about one-fifth from base, bent on sides at an obtuse angle, forming an ob- 

 tuse lateral protuberance. Elytra wider than thorax, disc very uneven with 

 short rugosities and rows of large distant punctures. Length 6.5 9.5 mm. 



Wells and Posey counties, Indiana; June 10. Many localities 

 in New Jersey, but usually rare; May 31 August -. Ranges 

 across the continent from New England and Canada to Van- 

 couver and Oregon, south in the eastern portion to Florida and 



