Goleopterological Notices^ VI. 483 



thorax long, one-third wider than long, the sides evenly and dis- 

 tinctly' convergent and very feebly, evenly arcuate from base to 

 apex, the basal angles very obtuse but only slightly rounded, the 

 apical less obtuse and blunt ; base strongly arcuate from angle to 

 angle ; apex evenly and feebly arcuato-truncate throughout the 

 width ; disk finely but strongly, sparsel}' punctate, scarcely at 

 all rugose near the sides. Elj'tra fully two-thirds longer than 

 wide, not more than twice as long as the prothorax and only just 

 visibly wider; humeri strongly swollen; punctures moderately 

 coarse, deep, impressed, somewhat close-set and even. Abdomen 

 minutely, densely punctulate and clothed with long and abun- 

 dant cinereous pubescence, the legs rather long. Length 3.5 mm.; 

 width 1.3 mm. 



Arizona. The specimen described agrees with the original 

 type and is a female. Atricornis is a very distinct species in 

 general appearance, owing to the long and gradually narrowed 

 prothorax, short pubescence and pale red legs. 



14. T. flllvotarsis Bland.— Proc. Ent. Soc. Phila., III., p. 254; Lee: 

 Proc. Acad., Phila., 1866, p. 352 (Pristoscelis). 



Slender, subcylindrical, shining, black, the elytra picescent ; 

 legs pale rufo-ferruginous, the femora piceous ; antennie dark 

 piceous, the basal joint still darker ; pubescence short, rather 

 fine and moderately dense, decumbent, cinereous and distinct. 

 Head more than three-fourths as wide as the prothorax, finely, 

 sparsely punctate, nearly smooth; impressions elongate and 

 feeble, remote, separated at apex by a small tumid area ; epi- 

 stoma and labrum short, each slightly pale at apex, the latter 

 truncate ; e^^es moderately large and prominent, slightly distant 

 from the prothorax ; antennte slender, about one-third longer than 

 the prothorax, the fifth joint only slightly dilated, outer joints 

 transversely ovoidal. Prothorax nearly one-half wider than 

 long, the sides parallel, moderately arcuate, more strongly so 

 behind the middle ; angles obtuse but onl^- slightly blunt, the 

 basal very distinct; apex broadly, feebly arcuate, the base much 

 more strongly so ; punctures small and sparse, the surface 

 smooth, only feebl}^ subrugose near the sides, the marginal fim- 

 briae well developed, dense and even. Eh'tra long, four-fifths 

 longer than wide, distinctly wider than the prothorax, parallel 



Annals N. Y. Acad. Scr., VIII., July, 1895.— 34 



