144 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



Two specimens beaten from custard apple at Lake Okeechobee. 

 March 6. In langurinus the body is much more slender, thorax 

 longer than wide, elytra much narrower, scarcely striate, intervals 

 flat, front tibia? not toothed. 



7590. Allecula atra Say. — One, beaten from oak. Eustis, 

 April 5. 



Hymenorus granulatus Bl. — A female, 9 mm. in length, 

 was taken at Ormond, April 14. 



Isomira ignora, sp. nov. 



Elongate, narrowly oval, convex. Uniform pale rufo-tes- 

 taceous, shining; sparsely clothed with very short fine prostrate 

 yellowish hairs. Head small, half the width of thorax, finely and 

 densely rugosely punctate; eyes small, separated by twice their 

 own diameters; antennae slender, scarcely half the length of body, 

 second joint half as long as third, the latter equal to fourth. Thorax 

 at base two-thirds wider than long, sides nearly straight and 

 parallel on basal half, thence converging and rounding into apex, 

 disc punctate like the head. Elytra at base scarcely wider than 

 thorax, sides parallel for three-fourths their length, thence gradually 

 rounding into apex; disc very finely and rather sparsely punctate 

 the punctures in places tending to form short transverse strigae. 

 Length 5 mm.; width 2.5 mm. 



Nine specimens beaten from oak. Dunedin, March 15-24; 

 Sanford, March 29; Ormond, April 3. Paler and much narrower 

 than /. quadristriata without trace of sutural striae. 



7610. Isomira valida Schwarz. — Two specimens beaten from 

 oak near Eustis, April 6. A robust species, 7-8 mm. in length. 



10,710. Eustrophus repandus Horn. — One from woody- 

 fungus near Dunedin, in company with E. bicolor, the latter com- 

 mon. March 16. 



Chrysanthia repanda Horn. — Common on the flowers 

 of the farkleberry at Sanford and Ormond. March 28-April 14. 

 Taken on no other plant. The elytra of all were a very handsome 

 purple in hue. 



8060. Macrobasis torsa Lee. — Three from flowers of thistle. 

 Sarasota, March 28. 



(To be continued.) 



