l!»04.] 59 



be assortod with reforcnce to the scape and 3rd juiiit of the (J antenna. Wing 

 ovate lanceolate, cither acute at the end of the median vein, or very little anterior 

 thereto, or elso subobtuse between the median and the sector : forked sector in- 

 serted into the stem, either at the medio-eubital cross vein, or on either side of it at 

 a distance less than the apical width of the basal cell. 



This genus is nearly co-extensive with Sections 3 C, 3 D, and 4 A of Pericoma 

 in the JSupplement of my Synopsis. 



Xenapates, gen. nov. 



Xenapates fraudulenta is the Algerian species No. X, op. ciL, June, 1896, pp. 

 130 to 131. The verticils of hair of the flagelluni are more elongate (almost cask- 

 shaped) than in Telinatoscopu.<!, and the fly is sufliciently described in respect of 

 stature and colouring by the words, " similar to Psi/choda phahenoides, Linn., but 

 easily separated by the forked sector being inserted in the basal cell interior to the 

 cross vein. 



As I am leaving home for a few months, I must defer until my return the com- 

 pletion of this generieal review. But it may be permissible to propose the name 



Clttocerus, fjen. nov. 



Co-extensive with Pericoma, Section 3 A of the Supplement to my Synopsis, 

 op. cit., June, 1896, and easily recognised by the peculiar tuft of hair of the 3rd 

 joint in the $ antenna, cf., op. cit., 2nd ser., vol. v, pi. ii, fig. P. 16 (J. 



{To be continued) . 



Calosoma aycophanta in Guernsey. — I have pleasure in recording the capture 

 of this fine beetle in Guernsey. The first specimen flew to light through the open 

 window of a house, facing the sea, on the evening of July 13th, 1902, and was brought 

 to me alive by its captor, Miss M. le Messurier, of Hauteville. The second was 

 running along the road on July 10th, 1903, and was captured and brought to Mr. 

 Sharp by one of his schoolboys. These arc the first examples that I have seen in 

 Guernsey, although it is recorded for this island by the late Dr. F. Lukis in Ansted's 

 Channel Inlands, 1862. In Jersey Mr. J. Sinel says that it occurs frequently.— W. 

 A. LtTFF, Guernsey : February, 1901. 



Monohammus sutor, L., in the Derwent T'atley.— In July, 1902, my friend Mr. 

 Johnson, of Byer Moor, Burnopfield, took a fine specimen of Monohammus sutor, L., 

 from some timber in Byer Moor Colliery yard, whilst about five years ago he took a 

 male Acanthocinus adilis, L., at the same locality, both specimens of which he has 

 most generously placed in my collection. Although these insects had evidently been 

 imported with the timber, yet they are most desirable additions to our local list of 

 Coleoptera. Mr. Bold records 31. sutor, L., as having occurred once in Newcastle- 

 upon-Tyne [Nat. Hist. Trans, of Northumberland and Durham, iv, p. 98 (1871)], 

 but Mr. Johnson's is, I think, the first record from the Derwent Valley.— KicnAHD 

 S. Bagnall, The Groves, Winlaton-on-Tyne : February 13th, 1904. 



