170 Mr. H. W. Bates's additions to the 



lateralibus et dorsalibus nigris, intervallis snbsparsim incnmbcnti- 

 ochraceo-pilosis, apice spinis duabus nigris exteriori elongata. 

 Antennae piceo-nigrse, articnlis basi plus minusve obscure rufis. 

 Caput parum punctatum, vitta nigra epistoma haud attingenti. 

 Thorax gracile trapezoideus, lateribus paullulum rotundatis, dorso 

 oequali fere impunctato. Pedes rufi, fenioribus, tibiis tarsorumque 

 apicibus nigris. Subtus rufus, lateribus fusco-nigris ochraceo- 

 pubescentibus ; prosterno utrinque vitta angusta nigra. Long. 

 13 millim. 



Hah. Mexico, Teapa in Tabasco {H. H. SdiWi) ; 

 Guatemala, Panzos in Vera Paz (Conradt). 



Ancylocera rubella, n. sp. (PI. VII., fig. 8, 2 ). 

 A. cardinali (Dalm.) affinis et simillima ; differt tantuni elytris 

 relative multo brevioribus, articulo 3io ( ? ) 4to haud longiori. 

 Linearis, laete rufa, antennis, pedibus, prosterno medio, mesosterno 

 toto metasterniqiie lateribus nigris. Antenn^B ( J ) corporis medium 

 vix attingentes, articulis 3 — 6 sicut in A. cardinali J triangulari- 

 bus, sed 7 — 10 magis oblongis. Thorax densissime grosse con- 

 fluenter punctatus ; elytra sublineatim dense prope apicem confuse 

 punctatis. Long. 9 millim., J . 



Hah. Mexico, Acapulco (//. H. Smith). One example 

 only. 



Championa hadeni, n. sp. 



Quoad formam C. auratcB (Bates) similis, sed thorace adhuc 

 longiori elytrisque supra subplanatis apicibusque inermibus, rotun- 

 datis. Griseo-fusca, griseo brevissime pilosa, elytris ad medium 

 C^iscia recta Integra eburnea, secundaque ante apicem cinereo-pilosa. 

 Oculi supra postice omnino divisi. Thorax cj'lindrico-elongatus, 

 dense subrugose punctatus. Elytra dense confluenter punctata. 

 Femora quam in O. aurata et C. ctenostomoides, magis abrupte 

 sed vix crassius clavata. Antennae ( J ) corpore multo breviorcs, 

 articulo 4to abbreviato 3ii dimidio breviori. Long. 14 millim., J . 



Hah. Mexico. 



4 specimen of this species was sent to me with one of 

 C. ctenostomoides, by Dr. Baden, without locality. The 

 subsequent discovery of an indubitable Mexican example 

 of the latter in the Salle collection enabled me, in the 

 Biologia Centr.-Amer. (Col., v., p. 315), to verify its 

 locality, and I am now convinced that C. hadeni, not- 

 withstanding its different coloration and form of the 

 elytral apices, is also Mexican. I have seen no other 

 example;. 



