THE OARABIDAE OF SALISBURY 65 



secured only (nie specimen of each. Our solitary 

 Dyschirius is />. flavicfxrnis, Per., and it is far from com- 

 mon. 



Tribe Siagonini. 



One Salisbury species only — Siagona australis, very 

 rare here, thoujjh it and N. cafjnt are common at Beira. 



Tribe Hcnpalini. 



Of this great Tribe I know of 03 species that are found 

 at or near Salisbury. Owing to the great similarity and 

 plain pattern of many — especially of the Harpali and Hy- 

 polithi — they are liable to be overlooked, and it is prob- 

 able that we have several more here as yet undiscovered. 

 Anisodactylus. Represented here by the following 

 species— J. sohrinus (common,) A. austrnlis 

 (common,) A. chgressits (occasional,) A. inchoatiis 

 (occasional.) A. nit ens (rare.) and one more 

 species, closely allied to A. sohrinus, which I am 

 not able to identify. 

 Bradytaenus. The handsome B. pseudoscalaris has been 



found here once or twice. 

 Omostropus. I have found single examples here of 0. 

 tersulus and two other species that seem to be new. 

 HypoUtkus. Of this difficult genus I know twenty 

 species that are found here. Of these I have taken 

 H. escheri (one example,) H. tomentosus (two ex.,) 

 H. porrectus (one example,) H. holosericeus 

 (abundant,) H. imitativus (common.) iSf. audens 

 (rare,)^. puncticollis (one example,) H. integer 

 (one example,) H. inter stitialis (very common.) 

 H. nielancholieus (one example,) H. diffiGiUs 

 (common,) H. ovampoanus (one example,) and 

 five others that appear to be undescribed. In 

 addition to the above, H. cruentulus, H. turbatus 

 and H. tetricus have been described by Peringuey 

 from this neighbourhood, but I have not yet come 

 across anv of them. 



