266 Mr. Martin Jacoby’s List of the Phytophagous 
America the present insect may be separated by the very 
finely punctured thorax and other particulars. 
Lpitriz parvula. 
Crioceris parvula, Fabr., Syst. Eleuth., 1., p. 468. 
Epitrix parvula, Jac., Biol. Centr.-Am., Col., vi., 1, 
p. 855, and Suppl., p. 289. 
Crepidodera hirtipennis, Me}sh., Proc. Acad. Phil., 11., 
p. 165. 
Hab. St. Vincent—Leeward side ; Grenada—Mount 
Gay Estate (Leeward side), Balthazar (Windward 
side). 
Numerous examples. Extends over the whole of the 
United States, and through Central-America to Panama, 
and also inhabits Cuba. 
Epitria fuscata. 
Crepidodera fuscata, Jacq. Duval, in Sagra’s Hist. fis. 
polit. y nat. de Cuba, Ins., p. 130. 
Kipitrie fuscata, Jac., Biol. Centr.-Am., Col., vi., 1, 
p. 048. 
Hab. Greuada—Mount Gay Estate (Leeward side). 
Described originally from Cuba, and recorded by me 
somewhat doubtfully from Guatemala. 
Guiyptina, Lec. 
Glyptina (Batophila) nigrita, sp. n. 
Apterous, black, the basal joints of the antenne and the legs 
dark fulvous; thorax very minutely punctate; elytra finely 
punctate-striate ; posterior femora piceous. 
Length, $ line. 
Head impunctate, the frontal tubercles extremely small, limited 
at the sides by narrow oblique grooves ; clypeus rather thick and 
broad, deflexed in front ; antennz scarcely extending to the middle 
of the elytra, fulvous, the four or five terminal joints fuscous and 
gradually thickened, the second joint small but much thickened, 
the following four joints thinner but not longer than the second ; 
thorax nearly twice as broad as long, the sides straight, the anterior 
