92 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



6106. — Ancylocera bicolor Oliv. Four examples of this 

 handsome Cerambycid were taken by beating oak when in blossom. 

 Bassenger, February 28; Sanford, March 28; Eustis, April 6. 



6134. — /Ethecerus hornii Lac. One from flowers of the 

 farkleberry (Vaccinium arboreum Marsh). Ormond, April 6. 



Euryptera flavatra, sp. now 



Elongate, slender. Head yellow, the occiput and labrum 

 piceous; thorax yellow with a black median stripe; scutellum 

 piceous; elytra, basal two-thirds yellow, apical third black; basal 

 joints of antennae and under surface black; apical half of antennae 

 and legs piceous, the coxae and tibiae paler. Eyes large, broadly 

 and deeply emarginate on the inner border. Antennae half the 

 length of body, second joint very small, third twice as long as fourth. 

 Thorax bell-shaped, flattened above, as wide at base as long, hind 

 angles scarcely prolonged, the black median stripe finely pubescent 

 and densely granulate-punctate, the sides densely clothed with 

 long prostrate yellow hair. Elytra coarsely and rather densely 

 punctate, the yellow portion with long, semi-erect yellow hairs, 

 the black portion with similar black hairs. Side pieces of meso- 

 . and meta-sterna finely and densely punctate; abdomen minutely 

 and very sparsely punctate. Hind coxae contiguous. Length 

 7.5 mm. 



One specimen swept from the flowers of the hoary lupine 

 {Lupinus diffusus Nutt.) near Dunedin. March 19. Very dif- 

 ferent from all other described Lepturids by the colour. The transi- 

 tion from the bright yellow basal to the shining black apical portion 

 of elytra is abrupt. 



6462. — Lypsimena fuscata Lee. One beaten from a dead 

 oak near Eustis, April 7. 



6562. — Lema cornuta Fab. One swept from hoary lupine 

 near Dunedin, March 29. 



Chlamys nodulosa Bl. This species, described in the 

 Canadian Entomologist, January, 1913, I found to be quite com- 

 mon at Dunedin, Lake Istokpoga and Sanford. It, therefore, 

 probably occurs throughout Central and Southern Florida on oak, 

 myrtle and other foliage. February 25 — April 14. 



(To be continued.) 



