146 Mr. G. C. Champion’s Notes on 
minutely punctate, the elytra with two punctured, narrowly 
separated, submarginal striae, the inner one not reaching the base 
or apex; eyes very large; antennal club elongate, moderately 
broad, the apical two joints united slightly longer than 9; elytra a 
little wider at the base than the thorax, rather long, subparallel in 
their basal half, the humeri prominent. 
Length 13, breadth ,°, mm. 
Hab. Mexico, Manantial (Flohr), “ Sierra de Durango ” 
(coll. Pic). 
One specimen. Very like H. subvestitus, but a little less 
elongate, smaller, narrower, and more compressed, and 
uniformly castaneous in colour. The elytral punctures, 
seen under the microscope, are shallow and flat-bottomed. 
The insect described appears to be referable to H. donchiert, 
Pic, the type of which was from the Sierra de Durango; 
the latter is said to be 2 mm. in length. 
*Hupactus erythrocephalus, n. sp. 
Inoolius glaber, Gorh., Biol. Centr.-Am., Coleopt. i, 2, 
p. 203 (1883) (part.). 
Oblong-ovate, convex, very shining, black, the head, palpi, 
antennae, and tarsi rufescent; glabrous above and_ beneath. 
Head, thorax, and elytra very minutely punctate, the punctures 
more closely placed on the thorax than on the elytra, the latter with 
two short irregular rows of coarser impressions on the disc below the 
base and with a very shallow broad submarginal groove along the 
apical half; eyes large; antennal club moderately broad, the apical 
two joints together as longas9. Metasternum and ventral segments 
very sparsely and minutely, the anterior portion of the posterior 
coxae closely and rather coarsely, punctate; ventral sutures 3 and 
4 double, sharply defined. 
Length 3, breadth 2 mm. 
Hab. GuatTEMALA, San Gerdnimo in Baja Vera Paz 
(Champron). 
This is the insect doubtfully referred by Gorham to 
Lioolius glaber, the types of which came from Dueias and 
Capetillo. The red head, the two short abbreviated striae 
on the disc of the elytra near the suture, and the very 
sparsely punctured glabrous ventral surface readily 
distinguish F. erythrocephalus from EH. glaber. The length 
of the latter was incorrectly given as “1-3 mm.”: it 
should be 2-24mm. £. glaber, it may be noted, is extremely 
