Mr. A. Murray on Coleoptera from Old Calabar. 325 



Var. ruyifrons, mihi. 



Supra cupreo-viridis, capite crebre aciculato, thorace sat fortiter 



transverse aciculato. 

 Long. 4:^ lin., lat. 1^ lin. 



The following are the points in which this variety differs from 

 the typical specimens : — 



The head, instead of being almost smooth in the middle and 

 towards the back, and only faintly furrowed on the sides, is 

 covered closely all over with distinct fine wrinkles, mostly lon- 

 gitudinal, with a few punctures scattered among them behind. 

 The thorax also is much more coarsely transversely wrinkled, 

 and the colour is yellowish-green instead of bluish-green. 



I have not thought these distinctions sufficient to constitute 

 this a different species, but they are sufficiently well marked to 

 justify me in noting it as a variety. 



4. C. comjjressus, mihi. 



Depressus, supra viridi-seneus, nitidus ; capite antice, antennis 

 pedibusque brunneis ; thorace angulato ; elytris viridibus le- 

 viter Eeneo-margiuatis, fortiter striatis ; subtus brunneus vel 

 nigro-piceus. 



Long. 2f-3 lin., lat. 1^ lin. 



Smaller, flatter, and more depressed than any species of Ca- 

 tascopus yet described ; having the compressed form of an insect 

 living under bark; shining, above brassy-green; the elytra 

 greenest, the thorax less so, the head only with a faint reflexion 

 of green on the back part ; the rest of the body blackish- brown 

 or piceous. The labrum much produced, opake ; the clypeus 

 shining, very slightly emarginate in front, with a fovea on each 

 side. Head slightly rugose on the sides, with an obhque de- 

 pression inclined towards the vertex ; behind smooth. Antennae 

 brown, first joint paler. Thorax somewhat convex, smooth and 

 impunctate, with a deep dorsal line, the sides and base slightly 

 reflexed and margined ; the base obtusely truncate ; the posterior 

 angles excised, so as to be nearly right-angled ; after leaving the 

 excision which forms the right angle at the base, the sides widen 

 out gradually till about a third from the front, where they form 

 a pretty sharp prominent angle*, and then gradually become 

 narrower till they reach the anterior angles, which are rounded ; 

 the slight projection or angle alluded to, causes the sides of 

 the thorax, instead of appearing rounded, to appear as if an- 



* This is a character peculiar to all the true Catascopi which 1 have 

 seen. 



