76 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 
did in many other cases, of including in his revision in the 
Rhynchophora characters of specimens other than the original 
type or types. There was only one specimen on which the 
original description was based, but in LeConte's revision a 
specimen from New Mexico was included which proves to be 
T. integer Hichh. 
I have found T. integer to be a very common species through- 
out the Rocky Mountain region, from Montana east to the 
Black Hills of South Dakota, and south to New Mexico and 
Arizona, from which it extends into Mexico. It infests Pinus 
ponderosa and Pinus monticola, but no evidence has been found 
that it is a primarily destructive enemy. T. plastographus 
Lee., seems to be confined entirely to the sections in California 
where P. radiata grows. 
Tomicus bonanseai n. sp. Female type, length 3.35 mm.; elongate 
cylindrical, dark reddish-brown. Prothorax slightly darker; declivity 
of elytra excavated and armed each side with four short acute teeth, the 
first smaller, and the second to fourth nearly of equal size, but the second 
and third are closer together and situated on a slight elevation of the 
margin. Head flat, opaque, densely granulated, clothed with short 
erect pubescence and with fine median elevated line from middle to 
anterior margin; antennae missing. Prothorax as long as broad, sparsely 
pubescent towards sides to anterior margin ; posterior half rather coarsely 
sparsely punctured, with smooth, shining dorsal space; sides parallel 
to anterior third, then strongly narrowed to apex. Elytra less than 
twice as long as prothorax, with short sparse pubescence towards the 
side margin and declivity; striae faintly impressed, punctures distinct 
and closely placed, slightly coarser towards the middle; interspace one 
narrow, two and three broad, flat and not punctured towards base, fourth 
to ninth sparsely punctured. 
Male type, length 3.35 mm.; yellowish-red (young example), differs 
from female in the narrower, more convex and more shining front, with 
the granules and punctures less distinct and with a more prominent 
subcarinate tubercle towards the middle; prothoracic punctures finer 
and less dense. Elytral striae and interspaces the same, but the teeth of 
the declivity are much coarser the first and fourth of equal size, acute; 
the second stout, triangular, with acute point at right angles to the third 
tooth, which is cylindrical, prominent and enlarged towards the apex. 
The antennal club is slightly oblong, with two sutures on the anterior 
face; the first straight and the second bisinuate, and posterior face is 
glabrous, shining, and without sutures. 
9 Type. No. 7514 U. S. Nat. Mus., Tacubaya, Mexico, in 
pine, Dr. S. J. Bonansea collector, bearing his number 2. 
c? Type. No. 7514 U. S. Nat. Mus., Prof. A. L- Herrera, 
collector, bearing his number 694. 
