I.H'onte.J 



CRYPTORILYNCHIM. 



bristles, or spines which are sparsely placed upon the prothorax, and upon 

 the alternate interspaces of the elytra. Length 3.7 mm.; .15 inch. 



A 1)**. 



The body is elongate-oval, as in the last division, from which this difler> 

 chiefly by the prothorax being feebly constricted near the tip. 



The beak is more slender towards the tip, and not flattened, about as loni: a- 

 the prothorax and moderately curved; the antennae are less slender, though 

 the second joint of the funicle is as long as the first; the club is oval, an- 

 nulated. Prothorax wider than long, narrowed in front from the base, 

 moderately rounded on the sides, feebly constricted near the tip, with dis- 

 tinct postocular lobes; disc strongly carinate; base truncate each side: 

 middle lobe acute, very distinct; scutellum indistinct. Elytra very little- 

 wider than the prothorax at base; humeri rounded, not very prominent : 

 sides subsinuate, then narrowed to the tip; alternate intervals feebly con- 

 vex, with tufts of erect bristles. Thighs sinuate beneath near the tip. 

 armed with two distinct teeth; tibiae slightly curved; very distinctly mucro- 

 nate; tarsi as in most of the other species. 



9. C. tristis, n. sp. 



Elongate -oval, densely clothed with dark gray scales, with intermixed 

 short erect bristles, which on the elytra are arranged in tufts upon the al- 

 ternate interspaces. Beak more slender at tip, punctured. Prothorax 

 deeply and densely punctured, strongly carinate, formed as above described. 

 Elytra indistinctly variegated on the ground color, tufts of bristles darker. 

 Beneath clothed with ,dirt colored scales, densely punctured. Length ~> 

 mm. ; .20 inch. 



Middle and Western States. I have adopted Dejean's name for this 

 species. 



B. 



The species of this division differ from all those above mentioned by the 

 elytra more oblong in form, and by the joints of the funicle of the an- 

 tennae 3-7 being equal in length, and gradually wider; the second joint is 

 either nearly as long as the first (oblongus), or very distinctly shorter; the 

 club is small, rounded-oval, distinctly annulated. The prothorax is rounded 

 on the sides, a little wider than long, narrowed in front, not strongly con- 

 stricted, with the postocular lobes feeble ; the disc is not carinate. Scu- 

 tellum variable ; elytra wider at base than the prothorax, with the humeri 

 rounded, not prominent, sides parallel, then obliquely rounded to the tip: 

 interspaces somewhat convex, nearly equal. Legs slender, thighs armed 

 with a distinct tooth in one species, which is obsolete in the other; tibia- 

 nearly straight. 

 Second joint of funicle scarcely shorter than first; body 



mottled with gray and brown scales 1O. oblongus. 



Second joint of funicle much shorter than first; elytra with 



alternate interspaces tessellated 11. ferratus. 



