108  THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



occurs on the Pacific slope and in the Rocky Mountains, and I am un- 

 willing to admit it in my list without further proof. 



Cyphon padi Linn. — Taken rarely in the nests of F. rufa at Kavan- 

 tholm, Kirjola and Urpala. It is not known as a myrniophile in this 

 country. 



Otiorhynclms 7naiirus Gyll. — Maeklin occasionally took this species 

 in the nests of F. riifa at Kirjola. In America this species is known to 

 occur only in Greenland, and its habits are entirely unknown. 



Leptura, Vol. XXL, 32. — While this article was in press, Dr. Geo. H. 

 Horn published in the Tr. Am. Ent. Soc. a new arrangement of the 

 Leptura therein named, based on an examination and study of the types 

 in the British Museum. The form I mentioned as being undescribed 

 turned out to be really nana, and now hcematites is regarded as its varietal 

 synonym. The typical nana is thus described : — " Antennae always 

 piceous ; anterior femora and base of middle yellowish, many specimens, 

 however, occur with brown legs, and others with parts of the hind legs 

 yellowish." Except these two the other forms remain as before. 



Erratum — Page 33, line 18, read female, instead of male. 



ADDITIONS TO THE LIST OF CANADIAN COLEOPTERA. 



BY ALVA H. KILMAN, RIDGEWAY, ONT. 



By frequent trips to the woods and marshes in spring, to gather and 

 sift the moss for hibernating coleoptera, by minutely examining the debris 

 on the shore of Lake Erie, and by the use of umbrella and sweeping 

 net later in the season, I have added to my collection of beetles, since 

 1886, several hundred good species. The following list contains those of 

 my captures that do not appear in the lists of Canadian Coleoptera. 



The species marked with an * are recorded by W. Hague Harrington 

 in his additions to Canadian Coleoptera, published in Vol. XVI., page 44 

 of this journal. Those distinguished by two ** are named in Prof. J. T 

 Bell's list of Staphylinidse, taken at Belleville, vide Vol. XVIL, page 49 of 

 this Journal. All the others, as far as I can learn, are quite new to 

 Canada. For convenience of reference, I attach the numbers found in 

 Henshaw's List of North American Coleoptera. 



