412 



PSYCHE. 



P. 202. MoLORCHus. [Corrected to 

 Malthinus by Say.] 



P. 205. Hispa obsohta, line i ; for 

 thorax, read elytra. 



P. 213. Colaspis lo-notata. Macula- 

 tus K. in Say's Cabinet. 



P. 220. Galenua coryli, last line ; 

 add: also on Ulmus. 



P. 232. Cocmiella malt. Allied in 

 size and markings to C. borealis F., but 

 in that the common basal spot is want- 

 ing and the spots are arranged 3, 3, i, 

 the two sutural ones being common. 



P. 238. Grylhis bivittatus. We have 

 one species \Mclanpplus femoratus'\, 

 similar to the above with vittated elytra 

 and thorax, but it has the posterior 

 tibiae sanguineous; the female is nearly 

 twice as large as the male. 



P. 239. Tridactylus apicalis. [Apici- 

 alis in Journ. Acad. Philad.] 



P. 260. HiSTER, line 3 ; for entire 

 or one abbreviated, read : entire or one 

 entire and one abbreviated. 



P. 261. Jlistermemnonius, lines 1 and 

 5; " inner " probably error for " outer." 



P. 267, line 1 ; for tarsi, read tibiae. 



P. 277. Cantharis jactata. Toothed 

 nails. 



P. 277. Cantharis parallda. Toothed 

 nails. 



P. 278. Cantharis laticornis. Poste- 

 rior nails toothed. 



P. 278. Cantharis scitula. Toothed 

 nails ; it varies in having a fuscous spot 

 or line on the thorax, but not so long 

 a one as in parallela etc. 



P. 281. Anobita/i tenuestrialum. How 

 does it differ from panicum ? 



P. 285. Nccrophorus orbicoUis. The 

 thorax is much more accurately rounded 

 in the 9 than in the $ . 



P. 297, last line but 6, M. hirticula. 

 Hirsuta? [cf. reference to p. 142.] 



P. 312. Anthribus noiatus. A. lugu- 

 hris Oliv. 



P. 315. Attelabus pubescens. A. r hoist 

 Schonh., i, 202. 



P. 316. Apion rostrum. A. sayi 

 Schonh., i, 252. 



P. 340. Lema melanocephala. L. mer- 

 digera F. The specimen sent by T. 

 W. H. was undoubtedly identical with 

 the European species. It was given 

 with other insects by Mrs. Peck and 

 probably was brought from Europe by 

 the late Prof. Peck. 



P. 343. Helodes trivittata. It is pro- 

 portionally broader than the phellandrii 

 of Europe and the vittata (Oliv.) of 

 Carolina. 



P. 435, note. [The copy referred to 

 is now in the library of the Boston 

 society of natural history. It was not 

 received by Dr. Harris till Aug. i, 

 1826.] 



P. 439. Brachinus fiimans. B. cyani- 

 pennis Say, Journ. acad., iii, 143. • 



P. 456. Harpalns pennsylvanicus. 

 Head proportionally more robust than 

 in bicolor; thorax not broadest at base, 

 not square. 



P. 458. Lcbia ornata. L. analis Dej. 



P. 459. Lebia hylacis. A misprint, 

 doubtless, for hylaeus. 



P. 461. Harpalns agricola. A. luc- 

 tuosus Dej. 



P. 469. Fero7iia sigil/ata, line 2 of 



