102 Mr. G. C. Champion’s Notes on 
*Hapalips sulcicollis, n. sp. 
Moderately elongate, narrow, convex, shining, ferruginous, the 
eyes black; glabrous above, the under surface with a few minute 
scattered hairs. Head short, thickly punctate, the line behind 
the epistoma almost obsolete, the eyes large and prominent; 
antennae comparatively slender, joints 4-8 short, subquadrate, the 
club abrupt. Thorax transverse, convex, somewhat rounded at 
the sides, and distinctly narrowed behind, the lateral margins 
feebly crenulate posteriorly, the hind angles acute, the disc deeply 
transversely grooved before the base; the surface somewhat 
thickly punctate. Elytra about as wide as the thorax, moderately 
long, gradually narrowed posteriorly; punctate-striate to near the 
apex, the striae faintly impressed, the interstices almost smooth. 
Beneath very sparsely punctate, the ventral segments almost smooth 
down the middle. Tibiae narrow. 
Length 2} mm. 
Hab. Nicaracua, Chontales (Janson); Panama, Tolé 
(Champion). 
Three specimens. Smaller and more convex than any 
of the other species of the genus known to me; the thorax 
narrowed posteriorly and also deeply transversely grooved 
on the disc before the base. H. sulcicollis was placed under 
the Languriid-genus Crotchia when our collections were 
sorted, and, indeed, is not unlike C. parvula, Gorh., from 
which it differs in having a smaller antennal club, a less 
constricted thorax, etc. The species agrees sufficiently 
well with H. cribricollis to be included in the same genus. 
Hapalips cribricollis. 
Hapalips cribricollis, Gorh., Biol. Centr.-Am., Coleopt. vii, 
p. 250. 
Described from Mexican specimens. The following are 
additional localities for it :— 
British Honpuras, Belize (Blancaneaux) ; GUATEMALA, 
Trece Aguas (Barber and Schwarz, in U.S. Nat. Mus.); 
Panama, David (Champion), Tabernilla, Canal Zone 
(Busck, in U.S. Nat. Mus.); Brazit, Pernambuco (coll. 
Fry). 
ted the long series received from Teapa there 
are some specimens with the post-median fascia of the 
elytra almost or quite obsolete. They have the thorax 
shaped exactly as shown in Reitter’s figure of the Colombian 
