(Page 53) 

 dietinctly longer than the second, the next-last ones feebly trasverse. 

 Pronotum is posteriorly somewhat narrower than elytra, 1^ times as broad 

 as long, rather robustly and very densely punctated, with a transverse 

 fovea before scutellum end a feeble groove in middle-line posteriorly; 

 hind corners distinctly pronounced, obtuse angular, and posterior magin 

 inside of these feebly incurved. Llytra a little longer than pronotum, 

 with GspecJally dense and rather robust rugose-punctation, their poster- 

 ior margin inside the outer corners feebly incurved; abdomen tapering, 

 its first three fr'^e dorsal joints and base of the fourth finely and ex- 

 tremely densely punctated, but the posterior half of the fourth joint is 

 together with the following joints sparsely punctated and strongly glis- 

 tening. First joint of hind tarsi is shorter than the two following joints 

 together. L. 4.5 mm. 



It is a native of North and Middle Europe. In this country it 1? not 

 heretofore found; but as it occurs in Skaane(at Pingsj'dn and Ramlbsa, where^ 

 from I have seen specimens), it is not improbable that it also might be 

 encountered here, perhaps most likely In Nordsjaelland or at Bornholm. 

 it lives on moist forest ground under leaves and moss. 



2. Subgenus Disochara Thorns. 

 7. 0. 1 ongiuccula Er. 



(("»ravh. Micr. 80). Crichs. Kaf. tfl<. Rr. I, 345; (Jen. Spec. Staph. 

 144; Kraetz Ins. T). II, 167; Thorns. Skand. Col. Ill, 50; Wuls et Rey Bre'- 

 vip. 1874, 380; ^anglb. Kaf. M. II, 64. - elon.?atula \uh4) . 



A mealum sized, slender and narrow species, of which tha long, pecu- 

 liarly heavily developed antennae serve ae easy identification mark among 



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