SPECIES OF SACRED BEETLES. 163 
2¢. Maailla. 
2 d. Instrumenta labialia, from beneath. 
2 e. Labial palpus removed. 
2 f. Antenna. 
2g. Anterior tibia. 
2h, Intermediate tibia and tarsus. 2%. Tarsus detached. 
2k. Extremity of posterior tibie and base of posterior tarsus. 
Fig. 3. ANomiopsis STerQuILINuS, and details. 
3. The insect, of the natural size. 
sa, The same, seen laterally. 
3b. Labrum. 
3c. Mandible. 
3d. Mazilla. 
3 €. Instrumenta labialia. 
3 f. Labial palpus detached. 
3g. Underside of meso- and metathorax. 
3h. Anterior tibia. 
31. Intermediate tibia and base of tarsus. 
3k. Posterior tibia and tarsus. 
Addend,—Since the preceding memoirwas readI have seen three or four distinct species 
most closely allied to Anomiopsis Dioscorides, in the Collection of Charles Darwin, Esq., 
by whom they were collected in the southern part of South America, at Bahia Blanca 
and Mendoza, where they reside in the excrement of the Rhea. 
I have therefore no hesitation in now regarding A. Sterquilinus as a distinct sub- 
genus, for which the name of Glyphiderus' may be proposed, in allusion to the remark- 
able sculpture of the thorax. 
' TAvdw, sculpo; et Aépn, collum. 
