262 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



Tenebroides florid anus Schaeffer. A single specimen of this recently 

 describedis Ostomid is in my collection from Moore Haven, where it was taken 

 March 2 from beneath the bark of a dead custard apple shrub. Schaeffer's 

 type in the U. S. Nat. Museum was from Key West. 



Limnichus nitidulus Lee. Four specimens have been taken about 

 Dunedin where it occurs beneath bark of dead bay trees and on foliage of low 

 plants. Described from Georgia. Recorded by Schwarz as very rare at Enter- 

 prise, Florida. 



Agriotes insanus Cand. One specim-en, March 20, beaten from oak- 

 No. species of Agriotes has hitherto been reported from Florida. The range of 

 A. Insanus i^ given by Leconten as, "Massachusetts to Illinois, Kansas and 

 Texas." It is frequent in Indiana where it occurs on the greater ragweed, 

 Ambrosia trifida L. 



Agriotes oblongicollis Melsh. One specimen was taken March 21 by 

 beating the foliage of the wax myrtle, Myrica cerifera L. LecontCis gives its 

 range as "Georgia to Canada and Illinois." Although Leconte and Horn in 

 characterizing the genus Agriotes^ state that the front is "not margined behind 

 the labrufn," it is distinctly so margined in A. oblongicollis, as mentioned by 

 Melsheimer in his original description!?. 



Drapetes geminatus Say. Hitherto known from Florida only from 

 Enterprise, where Schwarz found it "very rare." A single specimen was taken 

 April 14 by sweeping ferns in Skinner's hammock. 



Agrilus concinnus Horn. This large and handsome Agrilid was de- 

 scribedis from "Georgia and Floi ida," without definite locality. A single example 

 was swept from low huckleberry bushes on April 11. 



Tytthonyx flavicollis, sp. nov. 



Elongate-oblong, depressed. Elytra and legs black, strongly shining > 

 finely pubescent; head, except front of occiput, thorax, scutellum, prosternum 

 and side pieces of meso- and metasterna bright reddish-yellow, antennae and 

 under surface (except as noted) piceous black. Antennae broad, very strongly 

 serrate, second joint half the length of third, which is slightly shorter than the 

 fourth. Thorax transversely elliptical, larger than in erylhrocephalns, its margins 

 thickened and angles all rounded; disc almost smooth and with a deep, entire 

 median furrow. Elytra at base not wider than thorax, reaching second abdominal 

 segment, their tips separately rounded; the disk of each with three distinct but 

 feeble costse, the intervals strongly transversely rugose. Last ventral with a 

 small subacute median notch. Length 4.5 mm. 



One male swept April 18 from the foliage of a low huckleberry Differs 

 from both T. erythrocephalus Fabr. and ruficollis Schaeff. in colour, in sculpture 

 of elytra and in the form of emargination of the last ventral. 



Telephorus bilineatus Say. One specimen from beneath a chunk, 

 March 31. I was surprised to find that this common northern Lampyrid was 



13. Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc, XXVI, 1Q18, 109. 



14. Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc, XII, 1884, 15. 



15. Loc. cited, p. 16. 



16. Class. Col. N. Amer., 1883, 186. 



17. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phil., 11, 1845, 218. 



18. Trans. Amer, Ent. Soc, XVIII, 1801, 310. 



