MADEIRAN COLEOPTERA, 15 
434, Phaleria ciliata. 
Phaleria ciliata, Woll., Ins. Mad. 488 (1854). 
Inhabits Porto Santo, occurring in the sand (at the roots of plants), 
and beneath animal refuse, behind the southern beach. 
Fam. 48. TENEBRIONIDA. 
Genus 180. CHRANDRIA. 
(Dej., Cat. 222) Lucas, Col. de V Algérie, 345 (1849). 
435, Cerandria cornuta**. 
Trogosita cornuta, Fub., Ent. Syst. Suppl. 51 (1798). 
Phaleria cornuta, Lat., Gen. Crust. et Ins. ii. 175 (1807). 
Uloma cornuta, Steph., Ill. Brit. Ent. v. 10 (1832). 
Cerandria cornuta, Lucas, Col. de ? Algérie, 345 (1849). 
Inhabits Madeira proper, occurring in the houses and granaries of 
the villages and towns: I also, on one occasion, captured a specimen 
on the Dezerta Grande; but it had most likely been accidentally 
imported thither amongst the provisions which we had brought from 
Funchal. 
Genus 181. TRIBOLIUM. 
Macleay, Ann. Javan. 47 (1825). 
436. Tribolium ferrugineum**. 
Tenebrio ferrugineus, Fub., Spec. Ins. i, 824 (1781). 
Colydium castaneum, Host, Kaf. vii. 282. tab. 112. f. 13. KE (1797). 
Tribolium castaneum, MacLeay, Ann. Javan. 47 (1825). 
Stene ferruginea, Steph., Ill. Brit. Ent. v. 9 (1852). 
Tribolium ferrugineum, Woll., Ins. Mad. 491 (1854). 
Inhabits Madeira proper, occurring in the houses of the villages 
and towns. 
Genus 182, HYPOPHLEUS. 
Fabricius, Scrivt. af Natur, Selsk. (1790). 
The very abbreviated, stout, compressed, and gradually thickened 
antenne of Hypophleus, in conjunction with the glabrous, linear- 
elongate, subcylindrical bodies, the quadrate prothorax, and the 
short, robust legs of its various members, will be sufficient to distin- 
guish it from the allied Madeiran groups. Its four posterior tibie 
are almost unarmed (although spinulose) at their apex, but the ante- 
rior pair (which are more dilated and flattened-out than the others, 
