24© COLEOPTERA 



or sub-contiguous ; the posterior lamelliform, a little separated ; tarsi 

 pentamerous, simple. Abdomen composed of five segments, all free. 



Trog'oderma, 



Latreille : Laconi. Hist, des Ins. Coleop.^ Tom. ii.,/. 467. 



Mentum very short, rough ; ligiila membraneous, horizontal, trans- 

 versal, a little emarginate in front ; jmv-Iobes membraneous, contiguous, 

 hirsute at the end, unarmed internally ; last joint of the maxillary /rt-^/ 

 as long again as its predecessors conjointly, truncated at the end, the 

 first and third joints very short ; the labial palpi very short, the third 

 joint smaller than the second, a little produced and obtuse at the end ; 

 mandibles short, arcuated, their extremity simple ; labriim small, trans- 

 versal, rounded in front. Head small, deflexed, resting on a projection 

 of the prosternum ; eyes ovate, often a little emarginate. Antennce short, 

 with eleven joints, terminated by a variable club. Prothorax trans- 

 versal, having at each side below, a wide furrow for the reception of 

 the antennfe. Legs short, partly contractile. Anterior coxce slightly 

 separated, the intermediate very much so. Femora grooved below ; the 

 four joints of the tarsi equal. Prosternal process distinct, narrow, 

 received into a cavity of the mesosternum, which is short and broad. 

 Body oblong or oval, and pubescent. 



426. T. Serrigerum, Sharp ; Entom. Mon. Mag., May, 1877,/. 



270. Fiisco-ri/fiim, densius irregulariter griseo fuscoque vestitum ; 

 antennis apicem versus latissimis, basi testacea, apice fusco, articulis 

 5-1 1 intus productis. 



Long., 5 mm. 



Antennce very short, the third joint slender and rather long, the 

 fourth much shorter and a little angulated internally, the fifth slightly 

 produced, and, like the following joints, very short ; these apical joints 

 are dark in colour, and each is strongly produced inwardly, the eleventh 

 joint being also very short and broad, but not quite so wide as the 

 tenth. The uppet'-siii-face is not of a uniform colour, but of different 

 shades of infuscate red, and it is densely clothed with depressed grey 

 and fuscous hairs which obscure the sculpture, and which are not 

 arranged so as to form any definite pattern. The legs are reddish. 



The only specimen I have seen of this very distinct species was 

 given me by Mr. Wakefield, who found it at Riccarton, September 22nd, 



1873- 



427. T. Signatum, Sharp; Entom. Mon. Mag., May,!^-]-], p. 



271. Nigrum, sat nitidum, pubescentia sparsa sat erecta, et in elytris 

 fasciis tribus transversis albidis dispositis vestitum ; antennis brevibus, 

 basi testacea, apice fusco, clava 5-articulata ; tibiis fusco-rufis. 



Long., 3 mm. 



A)itemice- very short, the five apical joints strongly transverse, the 

 point of articulation placed in the middle of each. Head small, closely 

 punctured, and with a greyish pubescence. Thoj'ax a little narrowed 

 towards the front, the base in the middle much produced over the 



