Ceuthorrhynchus.] RHYNCHOPHORA, Sit 
New Forest ; Portsmouth district ; Glanvilles Wootton ; Aylsham, Norfolk ; Repton ; 
M:ubberley, Cheshire. ! 
G. asperifoliarum, Gyll. (quadrimaculatus, Marsh). Black, 
rather depressed above, under surface thickly clothed with white 
scales, elytra with a white spot at base of suture and a white lunate 
spot towards the margin on each side, situated about middle; the 
apex is also furnished with white markings ; in fresh specimens there 
are a considerable number of white scales, besides these patches, both 
on the thorax and the elytra ; antenne long, red, with club darker ; 
thorax short, deeply and narrowly constricted before apex, without 
lateral tubercles, but with the sides simply rounded and convex ; 
elytra with narrow indistinctly punctured striz, interstices broad and 
flat; tibiz and tarsi red, femora dark, strongly toothed. L. 2-21 
mm. 
Male with the anterior and posterior tibiz armed with a small hook, 
and the intermediate pair with a larger one; last ventral segment of 
abdomen impressed. 
Cn various species of Boraginaceee ; found on Eechium, Anchusa, Symphytum, 
Lithospermum, Myosotis and Cynoglossum ; locally common; generally distributed 
in the London district and the Southern counties ; Midlands, local, Leicester, Tam- 
worth, Bewdley, Birmingham district, &c. ; Cromer, Norfolk ; Mablethorpe, Lincoln- 
shire ; Southport, Lancashire ; Northumberland and Durham district ; not recorded 
from Scotland. 
C. arcuatus, Herbst. (occultus, Gyll.). Closely allied to the 
preceding from which it differs in having the thorax distinctly raised 
angularly at sides, and in having the second interstice of each elytron 
furnished with a white spot at base, which makes the white patch at 
suture much more conspicuous; the teeth of the femora also are 
smaller ; the underside is less thickly clothed with scales and the white 
markings at the sides of the elytra are also smaller; besides these 
characters the thorax is only slightly constricted before apex and the 
anterior margin is less raised ; the antenne, tibie and tarsi are yellowish- 
brown. L. 2-25 mm. 
On Labiate, probably Lycopus and Mentha; very rave; Manchester (Hardy, 
Taylor and Sidebotham); Chat Moss (Reston); Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire, and 
Southport (Chappell); received from Sherwood Forest (Gorham); Mickleham, 
Surrey (Power). 
C. euphorbia, Bris. (ervz, W.C.). About the size of the two pre- 
eeding species and resembling them in general appearance, but easily 
distinguished by having the antenne, tibie and tarsi black; ovate, 
rather convex, black, thorax with a whitish central line, not strongly 
constricted before apex, with rather obsolete lateral tubercles, closely 
punctured ; elytra with a patch at scutellum, a lunate spot on each 
side, and markings at apex, white, with rather strong punctured striz ; 
underside clothed with whitish scales; femora strongly toothed. L, 
2-25 mm, 
