204 ide Gk Bia, on Types of Heteromera 
20. Camarimena variabilis (Strongylium), op. cit. 11, 285. 
Apparently correctly recognised by Miklin. The type 
is a large coppery individual. It was made the type of 
Pascoe’s genus Simopium. 
21. Camarimena laeviuscula (Strongylium), loc. cit. 
Was also apparently correctly identified by Maklin. 
N.B.—Strongylium parabolica Walk., is not a Camari- 
mena, as thought by Miaklin, but a true Strong, poe (see 
below). 
C. parabolica Mikl. (nec Walk. = C. ovicaupa Mots., 
ex descr.) is very like C. variabilis, but differs in the 
punctures of the thorax and the foveate punctures in the 
basal half of the elytral striae being very much finer. 
22. Osdara picipes, loc. cit. 
There are three specimens in Walker’s series belonging 
to two distinct species, but only one is labelled in Walker’s 
handwriting. As this agrees much better with the descrip- 
tion than does the second species, it must be taken as the 
type, though the other is very much the commoner and is 
usually the species so named in collections. Both species 
have the elytral granules simple, nodular, and of very 
diverse sizes, black on a reddish ground; but in the type 
(2) the thorax is about 1} times as wide as long, the sides 
strongly sinuate and emarginate about the middle, markedly 
more prominent behind the emargination than in front of it. 
The disc is subnitid, not pubescent, with small scattered 
granules. In the ¢ the anterior and intermediate tibiae 
are produced and dentiform inwardly at the extreme apex. 
The second species, O. walkeri, sp. n., 18 very similar, 
but has the thorax twice as wide as long, the sides feebly 
sinuate in the middle and not more prominent behind than 
before the middle, and the disc distinctly punctate and 
pubescent throughout, with the surface irregularly im- 
pressed, and a distinct median longitudinal impression 
bounded laterally by an elevation before the base. In the 
& the anterior and intermediate tibiae are produced inwards 
at the apex, but much less sharply than in O. picipes. 
23. Osdara solida Walk. (Zophobas ?), op. cit. 11, 283. 
Does not appear to have been recognised by subsequent 
writers; the type ($) remains unique in the British 
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