Rev. T. Hincks’s Catalogue of Zoophytes. 467 
approaches most nearly to Ectatotarsus. No doubt many new 
and intermediate forms remain to be brought to light from 
among the numerous islands of the Pacific, few of which have 
as yet been visited by the naturalist, but every one of them 
probably having its own endemic species *. 
Bythoprotus lineatus. 
B. niger, subnitidus, albo lineatus; prothorace corrugato, metallico- 
viridi; elytris basi albo maculatis. 
Black, slightly shining, with remotely scattered, greyish-white, 
squamulose hairs, occasionally collected together and forming 
lines; head closely punctured, a line over each eye, and another in 
front ; antenne compressed, shorter than the body, inserted in 
a large deep fovea, the basal joint short, ventricose, the second 
about the same length, obconical, the third three times, the rest 
to the eighth twice the length of the second, and all, except the 
basal, fluted on both sides, the last three together not longer 
than the third, and scarcely thicker than the rest; prothorax 
very slightly convex, finely corrugated transversely, dull metallic 
green, with five narrow longitudinal lines; scutellum small; 
elytra nearly covering the abdomen, rather short, broadest at 
the shoulders, the sides rounded, a large white spot at the base, 
and six lines on each, which are united at the apex; legs black, 
claws deeply bifid; body beneath smooth, glossy greenish black, 
last abdominal segment with a strong tooth on each side; pro- 
and mesosterna elevated, continuous. Length 9 lines. 
LI.—A Catalogue of the Zoophytes of South Devon and South 
Cornwall. By the Rev. Tuomas Hincxs, B.A. 
{Continued from p. 310.] 
[Plate XVI] 
Fam. Diastoporide, Busk. 
1. Diastorora, Lamouroux. 
D. obelia, Fleming. 
Very common, on shells, &c., from moderate depths and from 
deep water. 
* M. le pére Montrouzier, a French missionary, has been for some time 
sending collections from some of these islands—Woodlark, Lifu, Balade, 
Art, &c.—to Paris, and they are being published in the ‘ Annales’ of the 
French Entomological Society. They appear to be, almost without ex- 
ception, new to science, 
