COLEOPTERA OF ALASKA. 11 



Columbia to northern California, Idaho, Montana to New Mexico, Minne- 

 sota, Iowa, Wisconsin to New York, New Jersey, Hudson Bay territory to 

 Canada; Kanitschatka. 



107. A. brunnea Gyll., Inpponica Sahlh., Sahlbergi Zett.. ampHcoUia Mann., D ',iS. 



— Kenai, Glenora, B. C, Washington, Colorado; northern and central 

 Europe ; northern and eastern Siberia. 



108. Badister ferruginous Dej., California ; SHbmnrinus Mots., a variety, occurs 



in Alaska, Bill. Mosc. 1859, iii, 158. 



109. Calathus ingratus Dej., confnsus Lee, A 3~), Dp. 271.— Unalaschka, Afog- 



nak, Kadjak, Siikine Kiver, B. C, British Columbia, the boreal regions of 

 Canada to Hudson Bay and Labrador, Lake Superior region, Colorado. 

 New Mexico; vav. incommodns Mann., D 39, two varieties. — Kadjak. va- 

 rious places on Kenai. 



110. C. advena Lee, An. Lye. N, Y., iv, 217, Lake Superior, Vermont, Maine; 



var. mollis Esch., A 43, C 5, three varieties, Unalaschka, Atkha, Sitkha; 

 var. lenis Mann., D 40, Kadjak, Afognak ; var. dulcis Maun., D 41, interior 

 of Kenai. 



111. Platynus maurus Mots., angusticollis X Kirby; var. 8-foveolatus Maek. 



(elytra with four dorsal punctures), stygicus Lee., Kadjak (LeConte), Lake 

 Superior region, Hudson Bay region to Lat. 65°, New Foundland. 



112. P. bicolor Dej., riparius Gebl. (1830), castaneipennis Mots. (1845), marginel- 



lus Lee. (1860), fallax Moraw (1863), Alaska, Fort Simpson (McKeuzie 

 Eiver), Mount Washington, N. H., California; Kanitschatka, Siberia, the 

 Amur countries, the Kirghes Steppes. 



113. P. erasus Lee. — Wrangel (Wickham), Vancouver Island. 



114. P. impreasus Panz, Dej.,sp. iii, p. 135. — Kamtschatka, Arctic, eastern and 



western Siberia; northern and central Europe; var. splendiduhis Mots., 

 Ins. Siberia, 1845, p. 138 Sitkha; Kamtschatka; perforatus Lee, Methy 

 (British America, Lat. 58°, Long. 110°. 

 Note. — This synonymy, suggested by Dr. LeConte, is not fully established- 

 and it would perhaps be more accurate to place splendiduhis in our cata- 

 logues as a species. 



115. P. planipennis Mots., Kaef. Russ. p. 68, Cp, 377.— Sitkha. 



Note. — According to Dr. Geo. H. Horn, Tr. Am. Ent. Soc. xix, 43, this is prob- 

 ably a variety of fossiger Dej. which occurs in California, Oregon anil 

 Colorado, and which has probably the following synonymy: brevicorni.t 

 Dej.. A 47, 48. famelicus Menet, robiistus Mots. 



116. P. Bogemanni Gyll., obsoletns Say. borenlis Mots., strigicollis Mann., placi- 



dtis X Lee, C 6, D 42.— Main land at the sources of the Kaknu and on the 

 peninsula of Kenai, British Columbia to Hudson Bay, Canada and the 

 United States generally ; Siberia and northern Europe. 



117. P. quadripunctatus DeG., Bayk. Dej., octocolus Mann., stigmosiis Lee, 



D 47. — Peninsula of Kenai, the boreal regions of British America to Hud- 

 sou Bay and southward to New York, western Pennsylvania, Michigan 

 and Wisconsin; through the Rocky Mountain region to New Mexico: 

 Kamtschatka, eastern and western Siberia, Dauria, boreal and alpine 

 Europe. 



118. P. bembidioides Kirby, cicatricosus Mots., I) 46. — Kwichpakh Kiver, inte- 



rior of Kenai, Washington, boreal regions of British America westward 



TBANS. AM. ENT. SOC. XXI. JANUARY, 1894. 



