

BY WILLIAM M A CLEAT, P. L 8., &C. 193 



164. MEGACERUS P0O0N0CERUS. Fairin. 



Ann. Soc. Ent. Belg., XXVII., 2. p. 43. 



1(35. Leptorhynchus bicolor. Guer. 



Voy. Coquille, p. 109, t. 6, f. 11.— Boisd., Voy. Astro!., II., 

 p. 312. 



166. Leptorhynchus linearis. Pascoe. 



Jonrn. of Ent., I., p. 390 



167. Leptorhynchus angustatus. Guer. 



Voy. Coquille, p. Ill, t, 6, f. 12.— Boisd., Voy. Astro!., II., 

 p. 318. 



168. Phocylides Pascoei. n. sp. 



Dark brown, opaque, rostrum very long, canaliculate along the 

 whole upper surface, rectangular, and widening a little behind 

 the insertion of the antenna?. The antennae are short, nioniliform, 

 and in the male are inserted in advance of the middle of the 

 rostrum. The head is rectangular, roughly punctate and a little 

 longer than the width. Thcrax narrowed at the apex, widening 

 in the middle, and slightly narrowed at the base, the length more 

 than three times its width, largely sulcate in the middle, and 

 densely punctate. The elytra are profoundly punctate-striate, the 

 punctures large and contiguous, the stria on each side of the suture 

 broad and smooth, the third interstice near the base, and two or 

 three places on the first interstice towards the apex cf a dark 

 piceous red. In the male the prolongations of the elytra are long, 

 depressed and margined, in the female they are short. 



Length, <J 20 lines. 



169. Miolispa cordiformis. n. sp. 



Piceous red, nitid, rostrum as long as the thorax, nearly cylin- 

 drical, widened at the apex, and canaliculate on the basal part. 

 Antennae short, moniliform, the joints from the second to the apex 

 slightly thickening and taking their rise in the male from the 



middle of the rostrum, in the female from near the base. Head 

 13 



