LeContc] 



PIIYTONOMIXI. 127 



not very unequal, and the fifth is but little longer than the fourth, so that 

 it is truly a Phytonomus. 



LEPYRUS Sch. 



The position of this genus seems to me to have been greatly misinter- 

 preted. Lacordaire has placed it next to Hylobius, from which it differs 

 in the form of the mandibles which are emarginate simply, as in Phytono- 

 mus; in the size and shape of the nientum, which is oblong and rather 

 large; in the development of the ligula and palpi, which are much smaller 

 than in Hylobius, and finally in the form of the articular surface of the 

 tibiae, which is in Lepyrus oblique, and in Hylobius and allies quite 

 lateral. 



In my opinion, Lepyrus is a gigantic PJiytonomus, with scarcely any 

 generic characters to separate it, except the less transverse eyes and the 

 oblique terminal surfaces of the tibi«. The habits of the species well 

 agree with this view, as they are found on plants, or on the ground, 

 Avhile the Hylobii occur only under bark. 

 Three species occur in our fauna. 



Elytral strife composed of large punctures 2 



" " feeble, alternately approximated, interspaces 



roughly granulate - 1. gemellus. 



2. Eljtra finely pubescent with gray hairs, marked each 



with a white spot 2. colon. 



Elytra thinly clothed with verj' small j-ellow scales, 



each with a yellow spot 3. geminatus. 



1. L. gemellus Kirby, Faun. Bor. Am. iv, 198, pi. 5, f . 7 ; Mann., 

 Bull. Mosc. 1852, ii, 351. 



Hudson Bay Territory and Alaska. 



2. L. colon Gyll., Sch. Cure, ii, 330 ; Boh., ib. vi, 2d, 295 ; Kirby, 

 Faun. Bor. Am. iv, 197 ; Curculio colon Linn., Mant. 531 ; cum synon. 

 plur. Europ. 



Hudson Bay Territory. 



3. L. geminatus Say, Cure. 12 ; ed. Lee. i, 373. 



Illinois to Colorado. Differs from L. colon by the elytra clothed with 

 small narrow yellow scales instead of fine gray hairs, and also by the elytra 

 being separately acuminate at tip instead of conjointly rounded. 



LISTRONOTUS Jekel, Ann. Ent. Fr. 1864, 565. 



This genus includes all the larger North American species heretofore 

 classed under Listroderes, and a few moderate sized or small species ; in 

 some of the latter the beak becomes cylindrical, and only feebly carinate, 

 so that they resemble in appearance Phytonomus. They are, however, 

 easily distinguished by the difterent proportions of the ventral segments ; 

 the first, second and fifth being long, and the third and fourth very short. 

 The legs are more slender than in Phytonomus, the tibise bent inwards at 



