290 



CURCULIOXID^. 



[LeConte. 



BARIS Germ. 



As I have here restricted lliis genus, it contains onlj' those species in 

 which the club of the antennae is small, nearly round, with the first joint 

 not sensitive, shining, and constituting more tlian one-half the mass. The 

 claws are separate, divergent, and of moderate size, and in some of the spe- 

 cies (sparsa, &c.) small. The beak is stout, usually short, and much curved; 

 the frontal constriction rather deep; sometimes it is a little longer tlian 

 the prothorax. The front coxaj are never very widely separated; the pro- 

 sternum is flat or broadly sulcate according to species. The pygidium is 

 vertical, and the fifth ventral is but little longer than the fourth. Tibiae 

 strongly mucrouate at tip. The species are glabrous or very slightly and 

 sparsely pubescent. 



Prosternum narrow between the coxse 2. 



" moderately wide 4. 



2. Prothorax gradually rounded on sides , 1. strenua. 



" more suddenly rounded in front and 

 constricted 3. 



3. Humeral callus less prominent 2. umbilicata. 



" " more prominent 3. striata. 



4. Prosternum flat, or feebly concave 5. 



" broadly subsulcate 6. 



5. Form narrow, nearly glabrous 11. 



" oval, nearly glabrous 4. subovalis. 



" oblong, nearly glabrous 5. transversa. 



" " pubescent, more finely and densely 



punctured 15, prviinosa. 



6. Pectoral groove coarsely punctured 7. 



" " sparsely punctured, color brassy, 

 claws smaller 9. 



7. Color slightly brassy 8. 



" black 6. carinulata. 



8. Interspaces irregularly punctulate 7. subsenea. 



" with regular rows 8. tumescens. 



9. Narrower 10. 



Stouter, prothorax verj'^ coarsely and sparselj'^ 



punctured 9. nitida. 



10. Prothorax more feebly punctured 10. interstitialis. 



" " strongly and denselj' punctured 11. conflnis. 



" " " " sparsely " 12. serea. 



11. Prothorax rather sparsely punctured 13. sparsa. 



" densely " 14. macra. 



1. B. strenua (Lee), Pr. Ac. Nat. Sc. Phil. 1868, 363, (Barulim). 



Wisconsin, Kansas, New Mexico. This species resembles in form and 

 sculpture B. carinidatus and others in that neighborhood, but is easily 

 known by the prosternum being narrow between the coxae, and flattened 



