414 Trans. Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 



ly, rather closely and unevenly punctate; abdomen almost as wide as the 

 elytra, finely, rather sparsely punctulate. Female unknown. Length 

 6.8 mm. ; width 1.0 mm. Nevada (Reno) alticola n. sp. 



6 — Moderately large and stout, piceous-brown, the elytra notably paler, 

 the head black; legs very pale piceous, the antennae fusco-testaceous; 

 head slightly dilated toward base with the sides broadly arcuate, much 

 longer than wide behind the antennae, the basal angles broadly round- 

 ed; neck fully one-third as wide; antennae and punctuation nearly as 

 in parous, the latterrather less close-set; prothorax two-fifths to one- 

 half longer than wide, much narrower than the head, the punctures 

 strong and rather close -set, somewhat sparser posteriorly; sides rath«r 

 fitrongly converging and almost straight, the angles obtuse and well 

 rounded; elytra elongate, as long as the prothorax but much wider, 

 somewhat wider than the head, the punctures fine but strong, rather 

 Hparsely and evenly distributed without order throughout; abdomen 

 gradually slishtly wider from base to apex, the former much narrower 

 than the elytra, the punctulation fine and inconspicuous, the surface 

 polished as usual; apices of the segments beneath nubilously paler. 

 Female with a long and very s-lender spine projecting from the middle 

 of the sixth ventral and curving upward behind the end of the abdomen 

 as in parous, except that here the tip of the spine is minutely expanded, 

 With the apex of the enlargement truncate, and not aciculate as it is in 

 that species. Length 6. 0;;mm. ; width 0.86-0.88 mm. British Columbia 

 (Victoria),— H. F. Wickham borealis n. sp. 



Much smaller and more slender, parallel, polished throughout, the head 

 paler, the abdomen darker, piceous, the later almost black and not paler 

 at tip, the prothorax, elytra and legs pale rufous, the antennae dusky 

 testaceous; head behind the antennae distinctly elongate, parallel with 

 the sides nearly straight, the angles well rounded as usual; punctures 

 moderately coarse, perforate, close-set laterally, gradually sparser 

 medially, the impunctate line rather broad, smaller but deep and sparser 

 beneath and wanting toward base, the tumescent polished line be- 

 hind the eyes distinct as in the preceding species; antennae only mod- 

 erately stout and distally incrassate, much longer than the head ; pro- 

 thorax one-half longer than wide, much narrower than the head, the 

 sides moderately converging and nearly straight, the angles obtuse and 

 rounded; punctures distinct but sparse, very irregularly distributed; 

 elytra small, longer than wide but obviously shorter than the prothorax 

 and slightly wider, not quite as wide as the head, the punctures unusu- 

 ally strong and only moderately sparse; abdomen fully as wid« as tha 

 elytra, feebly and sparsely punctulate. Female wanting, the lobe of 

 the sixth ventral in the male much more narrowly rounded than in 

 borealis. Length 4.7 mm.; width 0.68 mm. California (Los Angeles 

 Co.), — H. C. Fall pomonae n. sp. 



6 — Sixth ventral of the mala produced at the middle in a rather narrowly 

 rounded lobe; pronotal punctures rather coarse and conspicuous 

 thou-^h very sparse and almost wholly wanting near the sides toward 

 base. Body very slender, parallel, shining, rufo-piceous in color, the 

 head and most of the pronotura, as well as the abdomen, frequently 

 blackish, the elytra always pakr; legs pale, the antennae dusky; head 



