50 PROC. ENT. SOC. WASH., VOL. 22, NO. 3, MAR., 1920 



EXPLANATION OF PLATES. 



(Drawings made under writer's supervision by Mr. Harry Bradford, of the 



U. S. Bureau of Entomology.) 



Plate 3. 



Adult and pupal structures of Santuzza kuwanii Heinrich. 



Fig. 1. Male genitalia of moth. 



Fig. 2. Male genitalia of moth; detail (Aedoeagus with anellus attached). 



Fig. 3. Venation of moth. 



Fig. 4. Pupa (dorsal view). 



Fig. 5. Caudal end of pupa (lateral view). 



Fig. 6. Pupa (ventral view). 



Plate 4. 



Larval structures of Santuzza kuwanii, Heinrich. 

 Fig. 7. Head capsule dorsal view. 

 Fig. 8. Head capsule lateral view. 

 Fig. 9. Labrum. 

 Fig. 10. Epipharynx. 



Fig. 11. Crochets arrangement of abdominal proleg. 

 Fig. 12. Mandible. 

 Fig. 13. Labium and maxillae. 

 Fig. 14. Setal map of pro- and mesothorax and abdominal segments 3, 8 and 9. 



NEW AMERICAN CLERIDAE, WITH NOTE ON THE SYNONYMY OF 

 MICROPTERUS CHEVR (COLEOPT.). 



BY EDWARD A. CHAPIN, Washington, D. C. 



The material upon which the following new species of Cleridae 

 are based has been derived mainly from the United States National 

 Museum, for the use of which thanks are due Messrs. E. A. Sctnvarz 

 and H. S. Barber. For the use of the material of Isolemidia sub- 

 striata, n. sp., I thank Dr. F. E. Lutz and Mr. A. J. Mutchler, 

 of the American Museum of Natural History. 



In an article entitled, "Descriptions de quelques Terediles de 

 1'Afrique australe, du voyage de M. Drege" (Rev. Mag. Zool. 

 (1), V, 277, 1842), M. Chevrolat described a new species of clerid 

 as Micropterus N. G. brevipenn-is. The genus is characterized by 

 the specific description and therefore must be considered valid 

 until proven otherwise. Inasmuch as this name is preoccupied 

 by Micropterus Lacepede (Hist. Nat. Poiss. IV, 325, 1802), I would 



