DISTKIBUTION OF COLKOPTERA. oOa 



syiioiiyni of l-puncintus, Ixit is placed in tlic sut>geiius Bntenus Mots. 

 Mr. A. Fauvel tiiiiiks this an error, Faiiv. Kev.. 99. Ii occurs fVoni 

 Dauria to Kamtscbatka. Heydeii, 28. 

 HI . Perigona nigrriceps Dej., Trechicus umbripennis Ijec. fimicola. Jansonia Woll, 

 atriceps Fairin., Japonica Bates, Beccarii Piitz., discalis Cliaiul. — Enter- 

 prise, Fla., Schwarz ; District of Coliiml)ia, Ulke; South Carolina, 

 Georfiia, LeConte. Cape Verd, Madeira, Provence. lUyria, Abyssinia. 

 Madagascar, Annani, Japan, Borneo, New Caledonia, Ceylon (a variety). 

 Tr. Am. x. 386; T. v, 126 and 248; T. xix, 44 ; Fauv. Rev., 99. 



62. Blechrus glabratus Duft., fminutulus Goeze, nigrinus Mann., linearis Lee. 



— If, on further comparison, glabi-atiis and nigrinus prove to be the same, 

 the above will be the synonymy. 3rinHtuIus is much older. According 

 to Horn (T. xiii, p. ix) nigrinus is "very probably B. glahratus Dufts." 

 Canada, New York, Michigan, Wisconsin, Missouri, the Rocky Moun- 

 tains, California, Vancouver. T. x, 134. B. glahratus inhabits centi-al 

 and northern Europe. Not rare in the Kirg. Ste]ipes and in Siberia. 

 Mots., CO; Heydeii. 17. 



63. Plochionus pallens Fab., Bonfllsii Dej., Boisdnvali Gory, miens Lee— This 



species is not of common occurretice in the interior, but being " diffused 

 by commerce over the entire globe, it is found near all cities of our sea- 

 board visited by foreign vessels." Horn, T. x, 116. 



64. Miscodera arctica Payk., erythropus Mots. (Mots., 76; described and fig- 



ured) americana Mann., Hardyi Chaud. — From Alaska to New Found- 

 land. Northern Michigan, Schwarz. Horn writes of the various names 

 (T. ix, 168) : " It is all one species varying in size and brilliancy of sur- 

 face in the different localities." Europe (the mountains of Britain, the 

 Alps, Boreal Europe). Eastern Siberia, the Amur. Heyden. 24; Col. 

 Am., 91. 



65. Stenolophus ochropezus Say, Umhatus Mann., convexicollis Lee, gradlis 



Casey. — From Arizona to the Atlantic, and northward to Canada. I 

 have specimens from New Mexico and Colorado. In many places it is 

 abundant. Limhatus uccwr^ m Kamtscbatka. Bull. H. vi, 15; Heyden. 

 47. 



66. Tachycellus cognatus Gyll., Deutschii Sahib., ruficrns Kirby, axillaris. 



longiuscuius, conflagratus Mann., nitens Lee, Cat. iv. Mr. Fauvel gives 

 Deutschii precedence. — Occurs in North America in widely separated 

 localities. San Diego, Calif., LeConte; Mt. Washington, N. H., Austin; 

 Nova Scotia, Harrington, in litt. Nortliern Michigan and Lake Superior ; 

 Idaho, Wickham. Sitkha to Kadiak. Arctic Siberia, Arctic Eurojie, 

 Britain, Germany. Pr. 1868, 380; Heyden, 42. 



HALIPLID^. 



67. Haliplus rttflcoUis DeG., impressus X Kirby, immacnlicolUs Harris. — From 



the Southern and Middle States northward through Canada to Hudson 

 Bay and westward to New Mexico and the Rocky Mountains. General 

 in Europe, Turkestan and western Siberia. T. iv, 385; Kirby, 66; Hey- 

 den, 53. 



TKANS. AM. ENT. SOC. XXI. OCTOBER, 1894. 



