(Paje 101) 

 of the antennae in this species serve as an easy identification mark, the 

 antennae are nearly as long as the foreboay, rather robust, their second 

 and third joints are of almost equal len^ht, the fourth, fifth and sixth 

 feebly, the following three more strongly, increasingly shortened and trans- 

 verse, the tenth joint cylindrical and as lon^ as the two (^ ) or three 

 (^) preciding joints together, the distal joint is nearly twice as long 

 as the tenth, rather cylindrical, obtuse tip.. Pronotum much narrower than 

 elytra, fully as broad as long, anteriorly rounded off, poeteriorly feebly 

 narrowing, with obtuse-angular hind corners, slightly convex, very finely 

 or indistinctly punctated, feebly grooved in middle-line posteriorly; el- 

 ytra k time longer than pronotum, very finely, densely punctated, the sur- 

 face especially finely and densely shagreened; abdomen sparsely haired, 

 with fine and rather scattered punctation, the hindmost joints almost smooth. 

 L. 3 . mm. 



Rare or very rare, especially on damp, marshy forest ground under leaves 

 and moss. (Uunkemose at Odense; Damhusmose at Copenhagen, Frerslev Hegn 

 et al. near Hillerod). 



23. "Jenus Schl stoglossa Kr. 



(Kraatz. Ins. C. II, 344j Thorns. Skand. Col. Ill, 97; Huls. et Pey Br^- 

 vlp. 1675, 336; ianglb. Kaf. M. II, 130). 



The one species belonging to this jenus, upon which Kraatz has found- 

 ed the genus, was by Krichson assigned to H omalata , which it as a whole 

 very much resembles. It deviates from this jtinus namely in, that the short, 

 robust mandibles (Fig. 25) are cleft in two at the tip, and that the tongue 

 (Fig. 35a) is more deeply cleft, almost to the base, into two somewhat sep- 



-160- 



