404 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



truncated at apex, the angles broadly rounded, the lower angle most 

 protuberant. Length, 7 mm. 



Habitat. — Riverton and Avalon, New Jersey. 



This species will fall near plumiger, Klg. It differs from a male from 

 Florida, which I take to be this species, in lacking the circular depressed 

 ring around the median ocellus, and in lacking the interocellar furrow. A 

 female from Colorado has the circuhr depression around the median 

 ocellus indicated, but the interocellar furrow is wanting. Both of the 

 above specimens are differently coloured from the species here described. 



Described from two specimens received from the Wagner Free 

 Institute of Science of Philadelphia, and a female from the U. S. National 

 Museum bearing Mr. Ashmead's label. Unfortunately, Mr. Ashmead had 

 never published a description of this species. The specimens were all 

 collected by Mr. C. W. Johnson, to whom Mr. Ashmead had dedicated 

 the species. 



Melanoselandria Zubriskiei, Ashm., MSS. — This species is recorded 

 v by Ashmead in the New Jersey List from the Delaware Water Gap, VII, 

 5, and as collected by Mr. C W. Johnson. 1 have before me a single 

 specimen from the U. S. National Museum, bearing Ashmead's label, 

 collected by J. L. Zabriskiei at Flatbush, N. Y., 12, VI, 1897. Mr. 

 Ashmead's name, both generic and specific, is undescribed. The only 

 record of the name that I can find is the one given in the New Jersey 

 List, p. 606. An examination of the National Museum specimen proves 

 it to be Norton's Selandria fumipennis. I made this species the type of 

 a new genus, Hypargyricus^ the description was published in the 

 Canadian Entomologist for August, 1908, p. 290. This specimen has 

 the rudiment of the third anal vein especially distinct, it was evidently 

 this that misled Mr. Ashmead, causing him to place it in the subfamily 

 Hoplocampime, from all the members of which it is strikingly different. 



Coleoptera of Indiana. — Prof. W. S. Blatchley, of Indianapolis, 

 Indiana, has almost ready for the press a descriptive catalogue of the 

 Coleoptera known to occur in Indiana. It will be along the same lines 

 as his "Orthoptera of Indiana," published in 1903, and will be issued as 

 one of the reports of the Indiana Department of Geology and Natural 

 History. Any person outside of the State having examples of rare or 

 interesting species known to have been taken in Indiana will confer a 

 favour by sending him data regarding them. 



