CAMPSICNEMUS. 189 



processes ; the second joint as long as the following three together, 

 hairy, as is also the third. The female may be known from that of the 

 next species by the stouter fore legs with immaculate coxse (which are 

 more hairy outside), and only the base of the fore femora a little dusky 

 beneath. 



Common and generally diffused. (E. S. I.) 



2. curvipes, Fin. dol. 20. 27 (1823); Mg.; Mq. ; Hal.; Ztt. 

 ciliiibius, lloser. Olivaceus, fronte cyanescente, hypostomate infero 

 lutescente, pedibus ferrugineis, geniculis tarsisque nigricantibus, antennis 

 subacutis ; Mas. tibiis intermediis incrassatis apice nigris, femoribus 

 posterioribus2Jectinatis. Long. 1 ; alar. 3 lin. et ultra. 



Olive. Front bluish. Face below tawny-yellow ; above whitish, 

 almost vanishing in the male. Antennae with the third joint elongate 

 triangular in the male. Thorax a little brassy; scutellum bluish. 

 Wings dusky, with a faint dot at the convexity. Legs ferruginous, the 

 extreme base of the tibiae, and tlie tarsi, except the base, blackish, the 

 anterior tibiae a little dusky at the tip. The coxas and the underside 

 of the femora towards the base (especially the fore pair) dusky. In the 

 male the intermediate femora beneath are doubly pectinated, the anterior 

 row ending before the tip, the other row of shorter spines interrupted ; 

 the tibia siuuated at the base, thickened after the first third on to the 

 blackish tip, pectinated with long spines in front, beneath with a row 

 of shorter ones, interrupted near the base ; the metatarsus short, thick- 

 ened, and ending in a black point above ; the next joint longer than 

 the following three together ; the hind femora pectinated beneath, except 

 at the base. 



Common and generally diffused. (E. S. I.) 



3. loripes, Hal. z. j. v. 357. 10 (1831). -femoralis, Ztt. Olivaceus, 

 fronte cyanescente, hypostomate infero lutescente, coxis anticis pedibusque 

 ferrugineis, geniculis tarsisque nigricantibus, antennis obtusis ; Mas. 

 femoribus et tibiis intermediis interrupts pectinatis, metatarso breviore, 



articulis duobus sequentibus subaequilongis. Long. 1 ; alar. 3 lin. 



Olive. Front bluish. Face tawny-yellow below ; above whitish, very 

 narrow, but nearly linear. Antennas with the third joint obtuse tri- 

 angular. Thorax somewhat brassy ; scutellum bluish. Wings dusky, 

 with a faint dot at the convexity. Legs and fore coxae ferruginous ; 

 tibiae at the extreme base, and tarsi except the base, blackish, anterior 

 tibiaB dusky at the tip ; intermediate coxae with more than one bristle 

 outside. In the male the intermediate femora are dusky along the lower 

 edge, and. pectinated 'm a double row, from the base nearly to the middle, 

 and again before the tip ; the tibia is pectinated inside with short spines 

 from the base nearly to the middle, where it is bent, and after this again 

 begins a double row of longer spines ; the metatarsus is only as long as 

 the fourth joint, the third twice as long, the second nearly as much. 



