472 COLEOPTERA 



Group- SCOLOPTERID^. 



Undex-vientiim with a broad and rather prominent neck. Mandibles 

 somewhat thickened and pincer-Hke. Head elongate, sub-cyhndrical ; 

 rostrum continuous with the head, rather long and stout ; its scrobes 

 beginning at about one-third of its length from the apex, linear and 

 oblique. Antenna long ; scape at least attaining the hind margin of the 

 eye ; funiculus six or seven-jointed. Eyes longitudinal. Prothorax 

 without ocular lobes and not hollowed apically or inferiorly ; prosternum 

 very long in front of the anterior coxas. Elytra covering the pygidium. 

 Posterior femoj-a armed with a large tooth ; tibice unarmed at apex ; 

 their corbels small, terminal, and open ; claws of the tarsi simple or 

 appendiculate. The two basal abdominal segments connate, separated 

 by a fine rectilinear suture, sometimes effaced ; projecting intercoxal 

 process sub-lanceolate. Metathorax rather long ; its episterna of median 

 width. 



Body navicular, smooth. 



Scolopterus. 



White; Lacord. Hist, des Ins. Colcop., Tom., v'l., />. 566. 



Rostrum a little narrower and longer than the head, almost straight, 

 vertical, cylindrical and more or less depressed at the end ; its scrobes 

 oblique and directed downwards. Antennce long and slender; scape 

 scarcely thickened at the end, passing a httle beyond the hind margin 

 of the eye ; funiculus seven-jointed, first and second joints elongated, 

 obconical, the former the longer and stouter, joints three to seven very 

 short, almost rounded ; club stout, elongate, pubescent, articulate. Eyes 

 large, much depressed, oval, longitudinal. Prothorax longer than broad, 

 very regularly conical, truncated at base and apex. Scutellum very 

 small, variable. Elytra rather short, navicular, compressed, with a long 

 posterior slope, each furnished with a stout tubercle on the summit of 

 the declivity, very much wider than the prothorax at their base, with 

 their shoulders prolonged outwardly in the form of an acute cone'. 

 Legs long and slender ; femora gradually clavate, the posterior armed 

 near the end with a very large triangular tooth, the intermediate with a 

 smaller conical one, the anterior unarmed ; tibicv straight ; tarsi rather 

 long, first joint elongate, slender, third broad, fourth moderate ; claws 

 simple. Second abdominal segment larger than each of the two follow- 

 ing ; intercoxal-process wide. Body navicular, winged. 



835. S. tetr acanthus, White; Voy. Er. Terr., Ins., p. 15. Head 

 and thorax deep black ; elytra greenish-bronze, the s[)ines purplish- 

 black, the femora purplish-black, the remainder of the legs purplish- 

 ferruginous ; head and thorax quite smooth ; elytra very deeply punc- 

 tured in lines, the shoulders produced into a thick angular spine directed 

 outwards and very slightly upwards ; each elytron about the middle with 

 a strong spine near the suture directed somewhat backwards and tufted 

 with hair at the end ; the intermediate femora with a compressed spine 

 below near the end. 



Length, 3I lines. 



Port Nicholson. 



