1912] Wolcott. — The Cleridoe of the Stanford Expedition 73 



rather broad, starting at the margin and extending shghtly obliquely to near the 

 suture, the fourth subapical, strongly oblique, arcuate and widely interrupted at 

 the suture. Body beneath and legs black, more densely pubescent than the upper 

 surface. 



Allied to E. ruficollis var. nigricollis Scliklg., and E. suhjunctus 

 var. tristiculus'^clAdg., but having quite different elytral markings 

 and the anterior margin of prothorax clothed with a band of dense 

 gray pubescence, the latter arranged exactly as in E. hieroglyphi- 

 cus Gorh. A comparison with typical specimens of the last named 

 species (taken by H. W. Bates at Ega) show E. inimicus to be a 

 narrower, more convex, quite differently marked species. 



3. Enoclerus deliciolus Gorham. (Plate 6, fig. 3.) 



Clerus deliciolus Gorh. Cistula Entomologica, II, 1876, p. 82. 



One specimen, Madeira-Mamore R. R. Camp 41. 



The type locality as given by Rev. Gorham is "Amazon." 

 Schenkling records the species from Callanga, Peru, and states 

 that the thorax is occasionally entirely black. In the individual 

 at hand the head and thorax are bright red, while in the original 

 description these parts are said to be "rusty red (in one example 

 clouded with pitchy on the disc) clothed with a few dark col- 

 ored setae." These setae are rather numerous and conspicuous in 

 the fresh specimen and the tarsi are dark (pale in the type) . The 

 antennal club is peculiarly colored, being quite pale with the apical 

 joint nearly white. 



4. Phyllobaenus manni sp. nov. (Plate 6, fig. 4.) 



Flaviis, niiidiis, capite viridi-nigro, antice rufo, riiguloso, antennis rufo-piceis, arti- 

 culis 1, 2, 8, 9, 10°, albidis, prothorace viridi-nigro, sparsim fortiter punctato, lateribus 

 griseo-hirtis, elytris antice seriatim punctatis, maculis 6 nigro-violaceis guttis parvis 

 albo-setosis ornatis, mesosferno nigro, pedihus flavis, femoribus posterioribus tibiisque 

 extus nigro-macidatits. — Long. 6.5 mm. 



Rio Madeira, Brazil; Madeira-Mamore R. R. Camp No. 41. 



A very distinct species, resembling P. erythrocephalus Gorh. somewhat in form, 

 but with the body broader at the middle. Head very finely rugulose, occiput with 

 a longitudinal finely impressed line. Thorax strongly convex, coarsely, sparsely 

 punctate, densely so at sides and apex; flanks clothed with coarse, shaggy, gray 

 hairs. Scutellum small, black. Elytra at base wider than the prothorax; sides 

 broadly, evenly rounded from humeri to apex; basal half coarsely, seriately punc- 

 tate, scutellar region and apical half very finely punctate, nearly smooth; color 



