258 Flenuptera-Fleteroplera. 
Douglas and Scott; Deal, Billups ; Bickleigh, Devon, Big- 
nell ; Caterham, Champion ; Dover, 0. G. Hall ; Stevenage, 
Wymondley, Shalford, Butler. 
P. unifasciatus, /ub.—Oblong oval, black, clothed 
with golden deciduous pubescence; antenne, at least at 
the base, a spot near each eye, the extreme base of the 
pronotum, the apex of the scutellum, the base of the corium 
its imner and outer margins and its apical margin above 
the cuneus, yellow; cuneus blood-red, black externally, and 
yellow at the base and apex; membrane dusky, nervures 
pale; legs pale ochreous, femora red or brown except 
towards the base, extreme apex of tibiee and tarsi black. 
Vertex between the eyes in the ¢ narrower than each eye, 
in the ? considerably broader; pronotum shallowly and 
rugosely punctured; elytra more finely so, its sides sub- 
parallel in the g, rounded in the ? ; beneath with the 
margins of the acetabula and the sides of the pronotum 
yellow ; orifice of the odoriferous sac small and elongate ; 
abdomen sometimes with yellow spots. 
L. 6-63 mm. 
Not uncommon on Galiwm, and generally distributed. 
CAMPTOBROCHIS, Jicé. 
We have only one representative of this little genus of 
the five recorded in Puton’s Catalogue. It may be recog- 
nized easily from its allies by its shining, glabrous surface, 
which is very strongly punctured, and by the ecarinate 
vertex of the head, as well as by the very short third and 
fourth joints of the antenne, these together are much 
shorter than the second, which in the ¢ is much thicker 
than in the ? ; tibize without spines. 
C. lutescens, Schill. (punctatus, D. 5 S.).—Subconvex, 
oval, testaceous, shining, glabrous, very strongly punctured, 
pronotum entirely, or only its callosities, scutellum some- 
times except at the apex, the corium more or less, 
