340 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



Genus Dyscinetus Harold. 



43. Dyscinetus picipes (Burmeister). 

 Chalepus picipes Burmeister, Handb., V, 1847, p. 79. 



Five specimens, three from Nueva Gerona, taken in May, June, 

 and July, and two taken at Los Indios in September. 



Genus Strategus Hope. 



44. Strategus titanus (Fabricius). 



Scara6«M5 <t7aMM5 Fabricius, Syst. Ent., I, 1792, p. 13. 



A single female of this species, which is common in Cuba. 



45. Strategus anachoreta Burmeister. 



Strategus anachoreta Burmeister, Handb., V, 1847, p. 134. 



A long series of females and a single male, Caballos Mountains, 

 July. Mi. Link informed me that he collected most of the specimens 

 from an abandoned cistern left upon the mountains by turpentine- 

 gatherers. The cistern was open and full of water, into which the 

 beetles had fallen and been drowned, and Mr. Link fished them out. 



Genus Phileurus Latreille. 



46. Phileurus quadrituberculatus (Palisot de Beauvois). 



ScarabcBUS quadrituberculatus Palisot de Beauvois, Ins. Afr. et. Amer., p. 42, 

 PI. lb, fig. 5. 



One male found crawling on a log at Nueva Gerona, March 27, 191 3. 



Family CERAMBYCID^. 

 Genus Stenodontes Serville. 



47. Stenodontes chevrolati Gahan. 



Stenodontes chevrolati Gahan, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6) VI, 1890, p. 23. 



A long series of both males and females collected from a log of some 

 kind of hard wood, which Mr. Link found rotting on the Caballos 

 Mountains, March 27, 1913. The wood was soft and full of large 

 white grubs, which Mr. Link thinks were the larvae of this same species. 

 The collector says that if he had possessed an axe at the time he might 

 have gathered a peck of the beetles. 



