444 Mr. F. P. Paseoe on some new or little-known 
particulars, but from which it essentially differs in the shorter basal 
joint of the antenne, and the great length of the elytra, which, not- 
withstanding, do not cover the abdomen. Hemipeplus is known only 
from a single specimen originally found in Scotland, and which has 
been redescribed by M. Lacordaire ; who, on the other hand, had not 
seen the cognate genus Jnopeplus*, which, on reference to the first 
volume of this work, Pl. XVI. fig. 9, will be seen to differ very de- 
cidedly in habit. I have dedicated the species to Mr. Dohrn of Stettin, 
to whom I am indebted for my example. 
Ochrosanis Dohrnwi. (Pl. XVIII. fig. 7.) 
O. pallide ochracea; oculis nigris. 
Hab. West Indies. 
Pale ochre-yellow, very minutely punctured, and having an exceed- 
ingly delicate pubescence above; eyes black ; prothorax rather concave 
towards the base, with a strongly marked fovea near the posterior angle ; 
scutellum transverse, the sides at first parallel, triangular behind; elytra 
broader than the prothorax, four times as long as broad, but leaving the 
last and part of the penultimate segment of the abdomen uncovered ; 
abdomen beneath smoky brown, minutely piloso-granulated, sterna 
ochraceous, smooth ; antennse nearly as long as the head and protho- 
rax together. Length 43 lines. 
Enarsvs [Colydiide ]. 
Caput retractum. Oculi subrotundati. Antenne 11-articulate, subpilose, 
clava triarticulata, Palpi maxillares sensim crassiores. Mentuwm qua- 
dratum. Labiwn valde-transversum. Maville lobo interiore apice 
hamato. Prothorax medio elevatus, lateribus dilatatus, apice fortiter 
sinuatus. Elytra conyexa, rugosa, subquadrata, apice late rotundata. 
Pedes modice elongati; tidie filiformes, inermes, ciliate ; tars? graciles, 
articulis tribus basalibus zqualibus, subtus pilosis. Corpus amplum, 
rugosum, marginibus ciliatum. 
Allied to Rechodes, Er., but the prothorax and elytra ciliated at 
their margins, not serrated, the tibiz also ciliated, and the maxillary 
palpi scarcely securiform. The genus contains one of the finest 
species among the Colydiide, and is perhaps even more like Asida 
and Byrsax among the Heteromera than Rechodes. I owe my speci- 
mens to the kindness of Robert Bakewell, Esq. 
* =Jno, Lap. A name previously used by Leach for a genus of Moths, and 
which has been recently revived. Mr. F. Smith, in his Catalogue of Cucujide of 
the British Museum, long ago proposed to substitute “ Znopeplus.” [have recently 
seen an Australian example of this genus: it was sent as a Stuphylinus. 
