180 Dr. Malcolm Burr’s Prcli'iiiinary Revision of the 
Turin, who has clone valuable work upon the Dermapterous 
fauna of the Neotropical and Ethiopian Regions, but as 
the name is praeoccupied by Rehn (1906, Proc. U. S. N. M., 
XXX, p. 379), I have suggested a new name Enborellia. It 
contains at present nine * species, which may be arranged 
as follows:— 
1. Elytra libera per luar^iiieni suturaletii, 
usque ad apicem contigua, sub- 
quadrata ; species americanse. 
2. Pedes uuicolores, testacei; anten- 
narum segiuenta 1 et 2 Hava, 
ceteris flavo-brunneis. 
2.2. Femora fusco-aiinulata ; anten- 
iiarum segmenta 1 et 2 rul'e- 
scentia, ceteris brunneis . . . 
1.1. Elytra baud contigua, lateralia, vel 
saltern per miuiniam partem mar- 
ginis suturalis contigua. 
2. Elytra in parte basali angnsta, 
me.sonotum in modum scutelli 
liberantia; in parte postica valde 
dilatata, ad suturam attingentia, 
metanotum obtegentia; species 
ceylonica . 
2.2. Elytra angustata, lateralia, nequa- 
quam contigua. 
.3. Forceps ^ dentatus; species 
americanae 
4. Forceps d dente magnoarmato ; 
segmentum ultimum dorsale 
lateribus plicis 2 instruc- 
tum ; colore aterrimo . . 
4.4. Forceps dente parvo arma- 
tus ; segmentum ultimum 
dorsale lateribus tuberculis 
2 instructum. 
1. iimhigna, Borelli.t 
2. jayi.eirensis, Dobrn. 
3. (jreeni, Burr. 
4. peruviana, Borm. 
b. armata, Borelli. 
* Anisolabis andreinii, Bor., from Eritrea bas rudimentary elytra, 
and so tbis species also must be included bere, and also Anisolabis 
minuta, Caudell. 
■f Since writing tbe above, I bave compared syntypes of E. ambkjna, 
Borelli, with autbentic specimens of E. ianeirensis, Dobrn, with 
wbicb I now sink it as a bomonym. 
