276 Mr. T. Vernon Wollaston on 
420 (1854) ; Id., Cat. Mad. Col. 123 (1857) ; Id., Col. 
Atl. 341 (1865). Bruchus Breweri, Crotch, Proc. Zool. 
Soc. Lond. 379 (1867). 
Hab.—Maderenses (Mad.) ; hine inde in domibus et 
granariis. 
Fam. CRY PTOCEPHALIDA. 
p. 855 (genus CRYPTOCEPHALUS) . 
(Sp. 976) Cryptocephalus crenatus. 
This Madeiran Cryptocephalus appears to be much at- 
tached to the various kinds of Sedwm and Sempervivum ; 
and during our late sojourn at ‘the Mount” (about 
1700 feet above Funchal) we met with it in profusion on 
the fleshy leaves of a shrubby species of one of those 
plants,—in company with the exceedingly rare Ceuthor- 
hynchus lineatotessellatus, which is equally partial to the 
Seda and Semperviva. 
Fam. CHRYSOMELIDA. 
p. 361 (genus Mniopuinosoma). 
When defining this genus (Ins. Mad. 433) in 1854, I 
stated that the four anterior feet of the male sex have 
their basal joint considerably enlarged. A more careful 
inquiry has just convinced me that the articulation is 
almost as greatly developed in the hinder pair likewise ; 
so that I would desire to make a correction to that effect 
in my original diagnosis. Moreover, although I noticed 
the fact that the M. leve has sometimes a perceptibly 
greenish tinge (like the individual figured in the ‘ Ins. 
Mad.’) whilst at others it is entirely black, I omitted to 
mention that the examples in the latter predicament 
(which I may here cite as the “ var. 8. obscurior”’) have 
their limbs not only less clearly rufo-testaceous, but also 
their antennal club and tarsi more or less conspicuously 
darkened. 
Fam. HALTICIDA. 
p. 364 (genus Lonarrarsus). 
(Sp. 1007) Longitarsus saltator. 
_ I find that this large Longitarsus is attached to a 
Scrophularia which is common throughout the inter- 
