714 FAMILY XXXVII. ELATEEID.^. 



surface covered with small oblong scale-like hairs. Five species 

 have been taken in the State, while two others perhaps occur. For 

 a table separating the North American species see : 



Horn, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc., VII, 1879, Appendix, XIV-XV. 



KEY TO INDIANA SPECIES OF ADELOCEKA. 



a. Front tarsi in repose received in grooves on the under side of the tho- 

 rax. (Fig. 272, c.) 

 &. Tarsal grooves deep, oblique, distinctly limited, uniting behind with 



the antennal grooves. (Fig. 272, & and c.) 



c. Punctures of elytra in regular rows; impression of thorax shallow. 



1347. IMPRESSICOIXIS. 



cc. Punctures of elytra dense, not in rows ; impression of thorax dis- 

 tinct; surface of elytra irregularly spotted with brown and dull 

 yellow scales. 1348. MARMORATA. 



&&. Tarsal grooves feebly impressed, neither distinctly limited nor join- 

 ing the antennal grooves. 



fZ. Head and sides of thorax densely covered with closely appressed 



golden yellow scales. 1349. DISCOIDEA. 



dd. Head and thorax without yellow scales ; elytra spotted with brown 



and dull yellow. MACULATA. 



aa. Tarsal grooves entirely absent. 



e. Disk of elytra convex; thorax feebly channeled; antennal grooves 



long, reaching the coxse. 1350. AVITA. 



cc. Disk of elytra depressed; thorax broadly channeled; autennal 



grooves abbreviated behind. 



/. Impression of thorax entire, extending from base to apex; hind 

 angles divergent. 1351. OBTECTA. 



ff. Impression of thorax limited to basal half; hind angles not di- 

 vergent, compressed and feebly carinate; antennae very short. 



BREVICORNIS. 



1347 (4071). ADELOCERA IMPRESSICOLLIS Say, Ann. Lye. Nat. Hist., N. Y., 



I, 1825, 260; ibid. I, 394; II, 619. 



Elongate, slender, subdepressed. Dull reddish-brown, sparsely covered 

 with short, curved yellow hairs. Thorax oblong, disk convex, with an in- 

 distinct median sulcus and two shallow fovese each side near base, sides 

 nearly parallel, sinuate near hind angles, which are oblique and rather 

 short; surface densely, coarsely and deeply punctured. Elytra with regu- 

 lar rows of coarse, close, deep punctures. Under surface punctured like 

 the thorax. Length 9-11.5 mm. 



Southern half of State, frequent ; Fulton County, scarce. April 

 12-November 10. 



1348 (4072). ADELOCERA MARMORATA Fab., Syst. Eleut, II, 1801, 227. 

 Elongate, robust, rather strongly depressed. Dark reddish-brown, sub- 

 opaque; sparsely covered with dull yellow scales which, on the elytra, 

 form irregular blotches. Thorax as long as wide, disk subconvex, with a 



