Order 5. COLEOPTERA. 537 



vatinn of M. Farines, the larva of the two-spotted Ripiphorus lives and undergoes its clianj^es in the stalk ot 

 the Ertpigium campestre. 



Muodites, Latr (lii/iidius, Thiiiib.), has the wings also extended, but the elytra are very short ; the antennse arc 

 very strongly leathered ; the tarsal claws are toothed. 



I'elecotoina, Fis<'h., has also the tarsal claws toolhed, hut the wings [and abdomen] are entirely covered by the 

 elytra, [lixotic insects, of moderate size] In the others the palpi are terminated by a large hatchet-shaped 

 joint; the mandibles are bilid at the tips, and the antennaiof the males are only serrated. 



Mordella, Linn., has the antennae of equal thickness throughout, and slightly serrated in the males ; the eyes arc 

 not emarginate, [and the abdomen is terminated by a long point. J/, aculeata, Linn., and many other small 

 British species]. 



Anaspin, Geoffr., has the antenna; sim])le, and rather thickened to the tips, the eyes notched, [and the abdomen 

 not pointed]. A. frontalis [and numerous other minute British insects]. 



The fourtli tribe, Anthicides. possesses simple or but sliglitly serrated and filiforin antennae, or but little 

 thickened at the tips ; tlie joints very nearly alike, e.xcept the last, wliicli is ra her longer, and oval ; the 

 nia.\iHary palpi are terininafed by a hatchet-shaped joint ; the penultimate joint of the tarsi is bilobed ; the 

 body narrower in front, with tlie eyes entire or scarcely emarginate. Some of these s[)ecies are found 

 upon plants, but the majority live on the ground, and run with great quickness : their larvce are probably 

 parasites. They compose the genus, — 



NoTo.xus, Geoffr. 



Soraptia, Latr., has the thorax nearly semicircular, and the antennae inserted in a notch of the eyes, filiform. 

 They haveagreat analogy with Mordella, Cistela, &c., in their form. {S./iisca, a minute British species.) 



Steropei, Stev. (Blaitanus, Illig.), has the antennae terminated by three long joints. 



A^o/«j-M* proper, has the antennas gradually thickened, tlie joints conical, and the thorax of a reversed ovoid form, 

 narrowed, and truncated behind, or divided into two globose knots. Some species [to which English Entomolosrists 

 restrict the name i\'o/oj«*], have the thorax proiluced into a horn over the head. lY. wio/ioreco*, Linn, [a small 

 British species found in sand banks]. Those with the thorax unarmed [form the restricted genus AntAicus of En- 

 glish authors. A.fusciis, and many other minute species], some of which are apterous. 



The two following tribes, which terminate the Heteromera, have several characters in common: 

 mandibles terminated by a simple point ; palpi filiform, or but slightly thickened at the tips ; abdomen 

 soft ; elytra flexible ; possessing vesicatorj' powers ; ungues generally bifid. In the perfect state, many of 

 them are herbivorous ; but many amongst them are parasites whilst larvae. 



The fifth tribe, Horiales, differs from the succeeding by having the ungues denticulated, and furnished 

 ■with a seta ; and the antennae are filiform, not longer than the thorax ; the labrum small ; mandibles 

 Strong and exposed ; palpi filiform ; thorax square, and the two hind legs very robust, at least in one sex. 

 The transformations of Horia maculata are described in the Trans. Linn. Son. of London, [by the late 

 Lansdown Guilding]. The larva destroys that of a large Carpenter Bee {Xylocopa teredo, which 

 makes its nest in the trunks of trees in St. Vincents) : this is eflfected, as the author supposes, by the 

 larva of the beetle devouring the provisions laid up in store for the larva of the Xylocopa, which is of 

 course starved to death. This tribe is composed of the genus — 



HoRiA,Fabr., — 

 Speciesof which inhabit the intertropical parts of South America, and East India. 

 CUsites, Latr., has the head narrower than the thorax, and the posterior femora greatly thickened. 



The sixth and last tribe, or the Vesicatory Beetles {Cantharidics), is distinguished from the preceding 



by the tarsal ungues, which are very deeply divided, so as to appear double ; the head is generally 



]arge, broad, and rounded behind ; the thorax is generally narrowed behind, approaching the shape of 



a truncated heart ; in others it is nearly orbicular ; the elytra are often slightly inclined at the sides ; 



they counterfeit death when seized, and many at such times emit a yellowish liquid from the joints of 



the feet, which is caustic, and of a penetr iting odour, the organs for the secretion of which have not 



been observed. Several species {Meloe, Mylabris, Cantharis,) are employed externally as vesicants, and 



internally as a powerful stimulant ; the latter is however very dangerous in its application. 



This tribe is formed of the genus — 



Meloe, Linn.,— 



Which has been divided into various others. The anatomical researches of Messrs. L^on Dufour and Bretonneau 

 UTWn theepipastic powers of these insects, enable us to arrange these generic groups in a natural order, only slightly 

 differing from that already adopted. The latter has discovered that Sitaris does not possess this property ; it also 

 resembles Zouitis in its general structure, and the latter are contiguous to Cantharis. These insects theretore 



