SUBFAMILY II. — COREIN^. 



233 



The preceding is a free translation of the original description 

 of Montandon. His types were from Florida and of them he 

 said: "Received from W. H. Ashmead under the name of A. 

 calcarator Fab. to which they are related in general form but be- 

 sides the very notable difference in color, they differ by the an- 

 tennae, which are plainly longer and more slender." 



III. Euthochtha Mayr, 1865, 431. 



Elongate-oval species of medium size having the head short, 

 subquadrate, broader across the eyes than the apex of prono- 

 tum ; antenniferous tubercles prominent, extending much be- 

 yond the tylus, the space between them, therefore, emarginate 

 or unfilled, armed on the outer side with a small blunt spine; 

 antennae slender, the basal joint but little swollen, twice as long 

 as head, 2 and 3 more slender, the second the longer, 4 stouter, 

 fusiform, bristly, slightly shorter than 3 ; beak reaching middle 

 coxae, joints 2 and 4 subequal, basal joint longer, twice the 

 length of bucculae; pronotum with front angles produced as a 

 short tooth, front side margins armed with small tubercles or 

 blunt teeth, truncate basal margin wider than scutellum, its 

 lateral angles obtuse ; connexivum widely exposed, more so in 

 female, where the hind angles of its last two segments are 

 prolonged and the last dorsal deeply and widely emarginate, 



the tip of abdomen in that sex 

 therefore appearing serrate ; 

 membrane reaching tip of ab- 

 domen, its veins in part anas- 

 tomosing, in part forked; fe- 

 mora all armed beneath, the 

 hind ones of male curved, mod- 

 ., erately swollen, tuberculate 



if* Jm^^^Wk ^* s \ above; tibiae simple, straight in 



both sexes; spiracles placed 

 nearer the front than hind mar- 

 gins of ventral segments. One 

 species is known. 



168 (276). Euthochtha galeator 

 (Fabricius), 1803, 191. 

 Elongate-oval, depressed above, 

 Fig. 48. male x 2V-. (Original). subconvex bene ath. Above dull clay- 



yellow or reddisb-brown, thickly marked with fuscous punctures; an- 

 tennas reddish-brown or dull yellow, the terminal joint darker; connexi- 



