270 CURCULIONIDES. 



punctured : a much dilated brown dorsal vitta in which is a 

 narrow white vitta, a lateral brown vitta from the eye : elytra 

 with a much dilated common brownish vitta ; a few blackish 

 spots ; tibiae with a slight rufous tinge : tarsi spongy beneath : 

 eyes rounded. 



Length less than one-fifth of an inch. 



This much resembles the S. lineellm Gyll., but the nasal joint 

 is shorter, the eye smaller, the thorax shorter, &c. 



HADROMERUS Schonh. 



H. hilaris. — Brown varied with cinereous : rostrum with a 

 deeply indented line : antennae and tarsi rufous : thorax and head 

 with numerous deep punctures ; the former with a dilated lateral 

 vitta : elytra with an oblique cinereous arquated vitta from the 

 humerus to the middle ; tip cinereous almost constituting a band : 

 beneath with whitish scales : feet somewhat banded. 



Length one-fifth of an inch. 



Curculio hilaria ? Herbst. Natursyst. 



The male is smaller and the extremity of the oblique vitta is* 

 almost insulated so as to form a small spot in the middle of each 

 elytra, surrounded by a dark line. 



[Belongs to Pandeleteius Sch. — Lec] 



CLEONUS Schonh. 



C. trivittatus. — Covered with cinereous hair; thorax tri- 

 Hneate , elytra, suture and vitta on each blackish. 



Inhabits Arkansaw. 



Lixiis trhiittatus nob. Jour. Acad. Nat. Sei. [Wrong reference. 

 — Lec] 



Body black, densely covered by cinereous hair ; head, a black 

 lateral line from the eyes to the tip of the rostrum, and a carin- 

 ate line above; thorax deeply and widely indented behind; three 

 longitudinal blackish vittae ; an abbreviated, longitudinal, slightly 

 elevated line before, scattered punctures; elytra with regular 

 series of profound punctures; a sutural double blackish vitta 

 spotted or interrupted with cinereous ; and a vitta on the middle 

 of each elytron also spotted with cinereous; beneath with small 

 black spots. 



Length (total) about two-fifths of an inch. 



I obtained two or three specimens near the Rocky Mountains. 



