133 



Dryocoetes caryi Hopk.; U.S. Dept. of Agric., Office of Sec'y, Kept. No. 99, 

 50, 1915. 



" Pronotum with sides nearly straight, and basal angles not rounded." 



" Pronotum with posterior area distinctly punctured; antennal club- 

 with one faint recurved suture on anterior face and two faint recurved 

 sutures on posterior face." " Length, male type, 2-15 mm.; body oblong, 

 ellipitical, ferruginous; pronotal rugosities fine, densely placed, and changing 

 to rugose punctures to base; front flat, shining, distinctly and evenly 

 punctured, with a few long hairs toward the sides, and with faint median 

 line; declivity steep, subconvex, interspace 1 elevated, 2 and 3 flat, striae 

 with coarse punctures. Camp Caribou, Maine, in Picea sp., May 25, 

 1900; Austin Gary, collector; Hopk. U.S. No. 332c. Type, Cat. No. 7629, 

 U.S. National Museum." 



Female. "Front flattened, slightly more pubescent than in the male; 

 declivity more opaque and interspace 1 not so strongly elevated." 



This species is unknown to us. Since it occurs in Maine it will probably/ 

 be found in Eastern Canada. 



Host tree. Spruce. 



Distribution. Camp Caribou, Maine. 



The Genus Lymantor Lovendal. 

 Ent. Medd., vol. 2, p. 161, 1889. 



Lymantor decipiens Lee.; Am. Phil. Soc. Proc., 17: 624 (Xykcleptes) , 1878. 



Length, 1 8 mm. ; the front punctured, with a transverse postepistomal 

 impression; the pronotum longer than wide, feebly asperate in front, rather 

 coarsely and deeply punctured behind; the elytra coarsely and deeply, not 

 very closely punctured, not striate, the punctures rather irregular, the 

 rows hardly evident. There is sometimes a fairly distinct fifth segment 

 in the funicle. 



Host trees. Hicoria, Pyrus, Acer (literature). Taken by the writer 

 only in dead and dry maple limbs. The egg-tunnels and larval mines are 

 entirely in the outer wood, sometimes below the surface; both adults and 

 larvae find an important food in certain black wood fungi, which are always 

 abundant in the limbs they frequent. 



Distribution. Eastern Canada and Eastern United States. 



