118 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



XXX.. 17-113, 1894). One new genus has been established by Sausure 

 and Pictet since its publication, but it may perhaps not be distinct from 

 Ceuthophilus. Hadenoecus Scudd., and Daihinia Hald., are the only 

 North American genera not known to occur on the Pacific Coast. 



Ceuthophilus Scudd. 



Undoubtedly many species of this genus remain to be discovered 

 on the Pacific Coast. The following include all known to me up to the 

 present time : 



9. CeutJiophilus ce/atus Scudd. — Originally described from Siskiyou 

 Co., Shasta Co., San Francisco, and Los Angeles Co., Cal. Mr. Morse 

 brought specimens from Victoria, B. C, Sept. 29, and Divide, Lane Co., 

 Oregon, Sept. 12. 



10. Ceiftliophilns agassizii Scudd. — Recorded from islands in the 

 Gulf of Georgia, between Vancouver and Washington ; Vancouver 

 Island, British Columbia, and Oregon. 



11. CeittJiopliihis polluticornis, sp. nov. — Allied to C. mexicanus 

 and C paltesce?is, but much darker than they, castaneous or testaceous, 

 heavily and irregularly mottled with fuscous ; hind femora testaceous, 

 dotted with luteous and more or less clouded with fuscous, with a large 

 and conspicuous dark fuscous patch on the lower half of the outer face, 

 at least in the male, the lower margin luteous basally. Antenuce very 

 slender, about or nearly three times as long as the body, luteous or 

 testaceous except basally, where for a distance about equal to the breadth 

 of the body, excepting generally in the female, they are dark rufo-fuscous. 

 The legs are not very slender. Fore femora no stouter than middle 

 femora, about a fifth longer than the pronotum and less than half as long 

 as the hind femora, the inner carina with only a short subapical spine. 

 Middle femora with only a single short spine on either inferior carina, 

 besides the longer subapical spine of the front and the genicular spine of 

 the hind carina. Hind femora not so long as the body and more than 

 twice as long as the fore femora, rather stout and with hardly any equal 

 distal portion, about three ((^ ) or three and a half ( $ ) times as long as 

 broad, with but few scattered raised points along the upper surface in the 

 male, the outer inferior carina serrulate, with a rather large preapical spine 

 {^) or unarmed, with a broad tooth or angulation in place of the spine 

 ( 9 ), the inner spinulose with a similar spine more distant from the 

 tip {^) or with three or four subapical spinules ( $ ). Hind tibiae 

 straight, slightly longer than the femora, armed beneath with a pair of 



1 



