148 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 



sinuation at each side of the median tooth broader and feebler; an- 

 tennae, gular sutures and palpi similar; ligula densely fimbriate at 

 tip with about six stout membranous spicules; neck scarcely more 

 than a third as wide as the head; prothorax subquadrate; prosternura 

 rather short; elytra large and well developed; abdomen narrower, the 

 segments narrowly and feebly impressed at base; legs slender, the an- 

 teiior tarsi not dilated, the posterior slender and shorter, the first joint 

 only slightly longer than the second, equal to the fifth, the first four 

 decreasing uniformly in length. Cosmopolitan. [— Metaxy odoiita Csy .^. 



Lithocharis 



The known species of these genera are comparatively few 

 in number. 



Aderocharis Shp. 



This genus is rather well represented in Mexico by several 

 species, but only one occurs widely distributed within our 

 territories as follows : — 



Body broad, parallel, only very moderately convex, dark red-brown in 

 color throughout, the head black or blackish ; surface throughout 

 rendered very dull in lustre by fine, densely placed but not con- 

 fluent punctures, which are granuliform on the elytra; head not quite 

 as^long as wide, parallel, the sides feebly arcuate, the angles rather 

 narrowly rounded; eyes at nearly twice their length from the base; 

 antennae scarcely as long as the head and prothorax, the latter not 

 quite as wide as the head, slightly wider than long, with the sides dis- 

 tinctly converging from the very distinct apical, to the broadly rounded 

 ia'-al, angles, and straight; median impunctate lineyery fine but entire; 

 elytra quadrate, parallel, a fourth wider and longer than the prothorax; 

 abdomen parallel, nearly as wide as the elytra. Male with the fifth 

 ventral just visibly sinuate toward the middle of the apex, the sixth 

 broad, angularly emarginate throughout its entire width at apex, the 

 emargination some seven times as wide as deep, with the angle only 

 slightly rounded; seventh unusually developed, finely, longitudinally 

 slit beneath nearly throughout its length; female with the sixth ven- 

 tral rather narrowly and strongly rounded at tip- Length 6.5 mm. ; 

 width 1.3 mm. Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina (Asheville), 



and Iowa , . . . . corticina Grav. 



This species is moderately abundant and displays little or 

 no variability. 



Lithocharis Lac. 



The species of this genus are but few in number, and, in 

 several instances, cosmopolitan in distribution, being probably 



