160 bulletin: museum of comparative zoology. 



the mesal angle is not so strongly produced caudad. The last ventral 

 plate in the male has the caudal margin straight or but very slightly 

 incurved, not deeply emarginate as in P. chevalieri. The last tergite is 

 shorter though still long, not completely covering the genital segments 

 from above. 



Ventral pores occur from the first sternite, on which there are very 

 few, to the penult inclusive instead of being absent from the first two 

 and the last three. A conspicuous feature not mentioned in the 

 description of P. chevalieri is in the pitting of the anterior face of the 

 anterior sternites with the production of the caudal face of preceding 

 sternites as triangular pegs fitting into the excavations. 



Pairs of legs fifty-five. 



Length 34 mm. 



A small broken specimen from Jacmel, (M. C. Z. 1,875), was also 

 collected by Dr. Mann. 



Oryidae. 

 33. Notiphilides maximiliani (Humbert and Saussure). 



Notiphilus maximiliani Humbert et Saussure, Rev. mag. zool., 1870, ser. 2, 5,. 



p. 205. 

 Notiphilides maxiynHiani, (Humbert & Saussure) Pocock, Journ. Linn. soc. 



London, 1894, 24, p. 473.i 



Habitat. — Grenada.^ 



34. Orphnaeus brevilabiatus (Newport). 



Geophilus hrevilabiatus Newport, Trans. Linn. soc. London, 1844, 19, p. 436. 

 Orphnaeus hrasiliensis (Humbert & Saussure) Bollman, Proc. U. S. N. M., 

 1888, 11, p. 337.1 



Habitat. — Andros: Mangrove Cay (0. Bryant). Cuba.^ Ja- 

 maica: Montego Bay (E. A. Andrews). 



35. TiTANOPHiLUS maximus Chambcrlin. 

 Bull. M.C. Z., 1915, 59, p. 502. 

 Habitat. — Haiti: Grand Riviere (W. M. Mann). 



