(Page 395) 

 Distributed in iiUrope and Asia, and not rare in Denmark, often 

 numerous at outflowing tree sap, less numerous at fungi, excrements 

 and in plant-fertil izer^ compost. 



7. Ph. addendus Sharp. 



(Sharp. Proc. Ent. Soc. LonJ . V, 1667, 440; :/uls. et Rsy Bre'vip. 

 1877, 232; Janglb. Kaf. ::.. II, 445). 



:;iosely allied to both the preceding species, and like these with 

 a little angulate tip on the middle of the transversal ridge of the 

 depressed base of the abdominal second and third free d-orsal Joint. 



Jlistening black; elytra with brass- or bronze-lustre, occasional- 

 ly with greenish reflection, as well as the abdomen with blackish- 

 brown hair. 



The head in the o as broad as, in the Q narrower than pronotum, 

 rounded off squarely, with coarsely and densely punctate temples; the 

 antennae rather slender, more slenaer than in aeneus and chalceus , 

 their outer joints (6-10 scarcely transverse; pronotal sides indis-^ 

 tinctly or very feebly impressed, the number and position of its punc- 

 tures same as in aeneus ; elytra densely end rather finely punctate; 

 abdomen finely and rather densely punctate, less dense than in aeneus . 

 L. 10-1? mm. 



In the O the fore-tarsi only feebly dilated; abdominal sixth ven- 

 tral joint at tip with an obtuse angulate incision. 



Distributed in North and Middle Europe, but everywhere very rare, 

 possibly often mixed up with one of the two preceding species; here- 

 tofore it has here only been found at Odense under rotting plants (6. 



1896. N. P. J;>rgensen). 



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