50 THE FLORIDA ENTOMOLOGIST 
*992. (15297). C. gibbosa (Fabr.)——Common throughout the State. 
Usually listed as C. plicata (Fabr.). Common about Dunedin on roadside 
herbage. On chinquepin blooms, evidently eating the pollen, at Gainesville, 
May 20 (Doz.). 
*23, (15298). C. tuberculata Klug.—Enterprise (Sz. Ms.); Sanford, La 
Belle, Istokpoga and Dunedin (BI.); frequent about Dunedin, Dec.-Apr., on 
flowers and foliage of a dwarf huckleberry. Ft. Myers (Kn.). 
24. (15300). C. foveolata Knoch.—Tampa, rare (Sz.); Key West (Sz. Ms.). 
VI. Exema Lacordaire. 
Resemble Chlamys but smaller (1.8-2.7 mm.) ; the males usu- 
ally with face white. Habits of larvae the same. 
*95, (15305). E. gibber (Oliv.)—Common throughout the State. Occurs 
during the winter on the foliage of oak, huckleberry, etc. Dimorphic in hue, 
the typical form opaque black. My Chlamys nodulosa (1913, 22), based on 
the bronzed form, is a synonym. 
*26. (15306). E. conspersa (Mann.).—Taken in some numbers about 
Dunedin by sweeping low moist cultivated tracts about the borders of 
hammocks (Bl, 1920). No other record from the State, but a specimen 
in the U. S. N. Mus. from Enterprise. ne! 
Be Oice ( ). E. neglecta Blatch, 1920, 69,—Common throughout the 
southern half of the State; probably also in the northern portion. Frequents 
the foliage and flowers of huckleberry and other low shrubs during the win- 
ter and spring months. Usually listed as EH. conspersa. 
VII. Griburius Haldeman. 
Small oblong robust yellow species (5-6 mm.), the elytra and 
sometimes the thorax with black dots. Habits of larvae not known. 
The species of this and the genera up to XIV possess the char- 
acters mentioned under Antipus except that the antennae are 
usually long and slender, and the prosternum separates the front 
coxae. They belong to the subfamily Cryptocephalinae. 
*28. (15307). G. larvatus (Newn.)—Throughout the State. Taken 
frequently in spring about Dunedin by sweeping low herbage. Miami, 
LaBelle, Cleveland and Paradise Key (Kn.). 
VIII. Pachybrachys Redtenbacher. 
A large genus of small compact subcylindrical species (2.5-5.5 
mm.), varying much in color, from gray or. yellow to black, or 
red with black markings. Fall in his Revision (1915) includes 
159 species from North America. Of these 26 have been definitely 
recorded, some of them doubtless erroneously, from Florida. A 
number of the other species, known as yet only from Georgia or 
Alabama, probably occur in the northern part of the State. But 
little is known of the food habits of the larve. Schwarz wrote 
Fall that they ‘‘are unquestionably all sac-bearers, but are difficult 
to find and do not feed upon the foliage of plants.” 
