THL: C^RABIDAE of SiLISBURY 67 



Amblystonrus. Of tlicse interesting- little ilai-i>alides we 

 have no fewer than six species at Salisbury, v/here 

 I have captured A. intermedius, A. vittipcnnis, A 

 hlandHs, A. (frnafipcunis and two undescribed 

 species, one ol which 1 have also received from 

 Beira. .4. oruulipennis and A. hlandvs are com- 

 mon in summer, the latter abundant also in 

 Vfatabeleland. .1. scitns. Per., is a very common 

 species at Bulawayo and near Plumtree, but not 

 found here. 



Tribe Panagaehii. 



^Ve have five of these fine beetles at Salisbury — one 

 Teft'luSj three Eudema and the very curious Trichisia 

 ihodeHkma, Per., described in 1908 from an I'mtali speci- 

 men. Of this last T took one example at light in 

 December 1914, and I have seen one that was captured at 

 The Victoria Falls. Tefflus dclegorguei is found here 

 occasionally after the early summer rains running about 

 lifter dark, and it sometimes enters houses, apparently 

 atti-acted by the light. In the June of the present year 

 I found a pair hibernating under a large stone on the top 

 <»f a hill. EudeuHi {Craspedophorus) zamhezianum. Per., 

 is a rare beetle in this locality. E. sexmaculatum, Per 

 I have found at different times in summer, five examples 

 in all, on the top of a rocky hill close to Salisbury, and 

 of E. difficile, Chd. I have taken two specimens here. As 

 far as I am aware of, we have no local representative 

 of the genus Microcosmus, though M. aurantiacus appears 

 to be rather common at Beira, and has, I believe, been 

 found at Fmtali. 



Tinp.K f'lilai'nini. 



Salisbury is rich in iliese fine beetles, and among our 

 local species are some of the rarest and most interesting 

 of South African Carabidae. 



Of the genus Ohaenius no fewer than 29 species have 

 been found in this locality, and I have myself taken all 



