Coleoptera of St. Vincent, Grenada, and Grenadines. 269 
Mexico, andothers. LL. varicornis, Suffr., from Cuba, has 
a punctured thorax, with rounded sides, and prominent 
shoulders to the elytra; L. swbcinctus, Har., from 
Colombia and Central America, is much larger, and has 
long antennz (no mention is made in the description of 
the absence or presence of wings) ; L. intermedius, Jac., 
from Chiriqui, has differently coloured antennz. 
CHETOCNEMA, Steph. 
Chetocnema nana, sp. n. 
Below black, above obscure greenish-eneous, the basal joints of 
the antenne and the tibie and tarsi flavous; thorax nearly 
impunctate, without oblique angles; elytra strongly punctate-striate, 
the interstices impunctate. 
Length, } line. 
Head impunctate, opaque, greenish-zeneous, sometimes with one 
or two punctures above the eyes ; antennze piceous, the lower three 
or four joints flavous, the second joint slightly smaller than the 
third and following joints, the last joint elongate, pointed; thorax 
nearly twice as broad as long, the sides feebly rounded, without 
distinct oblique anterior angles, the basal margin with a scarcely 
visible impressed line and without punctures, the surface minutely 
granulate and microscopically punctured ; elytra nearly black, with 
the sutural and other striz regular, the interstices impunctate ; 
legs dark fulvous, the posterior femora piceous. 
Hab. Grenada—Balthazar (Windward side), Mount 
Gay Estate (Leeward side). 
This is one of the smallest species of the genus known 
tome. I cannot identify it with any of those described 
from North or Central America. It seems most nearly 
allied to C. obesula, Lec., and C. ectypa, Horn, on account 
of its small size and nearly impunctate thorax; but both 
these are described as having punctured elytral inter- 
stices. (C. nana belongs to the division in which the 
thorax is not distinctly angulate anteriorly and shows no 
trace of a row of punctures along the basal margin. 
Chetocnema minuta ? 
Chetocnema minuta, Melsh., Proc. Acad. Phil., iii., 
p. 167; Horn, Trans. Am. Ent. Soc., xvi., p. 262. 
