(Page 16C) 

 emarginate lobe, and by a rounded incision separated from this an acute, 

 thorn-shaped tooth, at least of length with the middle-lobe. 



Distributed in .'Middle Europe; very rare in this country and hereto- 

 fore only few have been found in North SJaelland (Stenholtsvang, Hillerfzfd, 

 7. 07 author) under bark of oaks, which were attacked by Scolytus intricatus . 

 57. H. subterranea Pvluls. at Rey. 



(I-^uls. et Rey Opusc. Ent. II, 1853, 40; Kraatz Ins. D. II, 2&1 ; Thorns. 

 Skand. Col. X, 320; Sharp Rev. Brit. Horn. 219; Muls. et Pey Erevip. 1873, 

 466 [AlaobWJi Janglb. Kaf. M. II, 189). 



(Page 161) 



A rather evenly broad species with robust antennae, identified by color 

 of the body and by the sex-characters of the u , 



^listening brownish-red or yellowish-red, very finely haired; the head 

 and the next-last two-three abdominal Joints pitch-black or pitch-brown; 

 antennae pitch-brown, their base, and the legs reddish-yellow. 



The head broad and short, very little narrower than pronotum, indistiot- 

 ly punctated; antennae short and robust, thickened distally, their first 

 two joints short and thick, the third scarcely shorter than thw second, 

 but narrower, the following (4-10) increasingly strongly transverse, so 

 that the next-last become over twice as broad as long; distal Joint short,, 

 about as lonj as the tv;o next-last Joints together, tapering. Pronotum 

 amply Ij times as broad as long, only a little narrower than elytra, with 

 feebly rounded sides and rounded off hind corners, slightly convex, with 

 very fine isolated punctation; elytra </!? longer than pronotum, somewhat 

 more distinctly and densely punctated than this; first three free dorsal 



•27 2- 



