COPROPHAGOTJS LAMELLICORNS. 313 



(Ateuch.), Fb., Ent. Syst. i. p. 63; Erichs. Nat. Ins. iii. 

 p. 753 ; Sturm. Verz. 76, 66. 

 ? vwrhillosiis, McLeay, Horie Ent. i. 2, p. 503. 

 Dalmatia ; Barbary ; Tunis ; Sicily, Sec. 



Omi:;NTAL Eegion. 



84. hyahminus, Casteln., Hist. Nat. ii. 1840, p. 64 ; lUiger, Dej. 



Cat. 3rd ed. p. 150. 

 India Or. 



85. devotus, Eedtenb., Hiigel. Kaschn. iv. 2, p. 515. 

 India Or. 



86. eyichsnni, Harold, Col. Hefte ii. p. 94 (1867). 

 India Or. 



87. [langeticiis, Casteln., Hist. Nat. ii. p. 64. 



88. mnctus, Fb., Ent. Syst. Suppl. p. 34 ; Syst. El. i. p. 56 ; 



Casteln. Hist. Nat. ii. p. 65. 

 India Or. ; Punjab. 



89. ivilsoni, Waterli., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (6), v. p. 366 (1890). 

 Persia. 



Ethiopian Piegion. 



Since tiie above was in the press, I have seen a copy of the 

 Annales de la Soc. Ent. Belgique, and find that Fairmaire has 

 described a new species from Somali-land, and mentions the 

 following as occurring in the same district •.—(egiiptionim, Latr. ; 

 (eratns, Gerst. ; cornffrons, Cast. ; Iteristriatiis, Fairm., Ann. Soc. 

 Ent. Belgique, xxxvii. p. 147 (1893). 1. — Banan ; Ouebbi ; 

 Abdallah. This species is very closely allied to hnnarcki. 



A. semipunctatus, Fb. The habits of this species are noticed 

 by Berge {G. E. Ent. Belgique, xxvi. p. cxlix) ; Ponj. (Bull. Soc. 

 Ent. France (6), v. p. cix). 



A. sacet; L. Habits and flight discussed by Fabre (Souvenirs 

 Entomologiques, pp. 1-38, 1879) ; Westwood (Proc. Ent. Soc. 

 1868, p. XXV.). 



A. palemo, Oliv., is identical with intricatus, Fb. ; while 

 morhillosiis, Fb., only differs from intricatus in having the punc- 

 tures on the thorax large, coarse, and widely separated ; the 

 punctures in i)itricatHs being very fine and close together. Lacor- 

 daire (Gen. des Coleopteres, iii. p. 68) brackets palemo with 

 morhillosus, Fb. 



A. cicatricosus, Lucas, is very closely allied to, if not identical 

 with, A. rariulosus, Fb. 



The following genus, Mnematidiuni, Eitsema, was inadver- 

 tently omitted from my table. It is, however, closely allied, and 

 indeed hardly separable from the true Ateadius, from which it 

 diiiers in having the body flattened and parallel, the anterior. 



