170 Journal New York Entomological Society. [Voi. xxviii. 



coarsely pubescent ; tarsal claws single. Three species are known, 

 two from Texas and Missouri, the other 



Eisonyx {Einnononycha) picipes Pierce, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., LI, 1916, 472. 

 Rhomboidal, convex, widest between basal third and fourth of elytra. 

 Black, feebly shining, sparsely clothed with very small patches of linear scales 

 on base of beak, sides of thorax and bases of third and seventh elytral inter- 

 vals. Beak densely, deeply and finely punctate, separated "from head by a trans- 

 verse, sharply defined groove. Thorax as long as wide, apex half as wide as 

 base, disk deeply, strongly and irregularly punctate with median and discal 

 smooth areas. Greatest width of elytra about one-half wider than that of 

 thorax ; striae strong at base, gradually evanescent ; punctuation extremely fine 

 and sparse. Abdomen finely and sparsely punctate, the first and second seg- 

 ments connate at middle. Length, 2.5—3.7 mm. 



Described by Pierce from several specimens taken at Nashville, 

 Tenn., in August and September, some of them from the roots of an 

 aster. Belongs to Casey's genus Enuwnonyclia^^' which Pierce, loc. cit., 

 reduces to a subgenus of Eisonyx. 



Limnobaris cana Lee, 1876, 421. 



Black, shining, antennae and legs dull red; upper surface rather thickly 

 clothed with small Oval gray scales. Beak rather stout, shorter than thorax, 

 deeply, densely lineato-punctate, male, as long as head and thorax, slender, 

 slightly curved, polished, punctured only at base, female. Thorax scarcely as 

 long as wide, densely and rather coarsely punctate. Elytral striae deep, inter- 

 vals flat, rugosely punctate, the scales not arranged in rows. Fifth ventral 

 one-half longer than fourth. Length, 4.7-5 mm. 



This name and description should be inserted above Number 617, 

 p. 402. The species is known froin St. Augustine, Tybee Beach and 

 Enterprise, Fla., and Santo Tomas, Texas. 



633. Catapastus albonotatus Linell. — A number of specimens of 

 this little Barid were taken by beating in the midst of the dense ham- 

 mocks at Cape Sable, Fla., Feb. 21 to 2'^. It is the smallest member 

 of the genus. 



Barilepton robusta new species. 



Elongate, robust ; subcylindrical. Black, shining ; legs and antennae dull 

 reddish-brown ; above evenly and densely clothed with slate-gray scales, those 

 on thorax lanceolate-triangular and arranged transversely, their margins con- 

 tiguous ; those on elytra elongate-oval, smaller, irregularly overlapping ; under 



oAnn. N. Y. Acad. Sci., VII, 1893, 601. 



