OTIORHYNCHIDA—EVOTINI. 53 
lar punctures, usually separated by more than their own diameter, and 
situated in barely impressed shallow striz, the tenth stria complete; inter- 
spaces flat or gently convex and similar. Legs with subclavate femora 
internally emarginate apically, apically expanded and mucronate tibia, and 
short and broad apically expanded tarsal joints. Under surface of the body 
and coxee densely punctate. Second segment of the abdomen, incorrectly 
given on the plate, as long as the two following segments’ together and 
separated from the first by an arcuate suture. 
Length of whole body, 11:5; elytra, 75™. 
Florissant, Colorado. Three specimens, Nos. 2450, 9215 and 11252, 
12438. 
LACHNOPUS HUMATUS. 
Pin, Mie, 11: 
This species is represented only by a couple of elytra, one of them 
accompanied by a leg. It differs from the preceding in the coarser punctures 
of the striz, which are so heavily impressed as to involve slightly the sides 
of the interspaces and give the punctures somewhat of a transverse appear- 
ance; they are also separated by a less distance from each other, and the 
alternate interspaces are somewhat more elevated than the intermediate 
ones. The femora show scarcely any sign of any internal apical emargina- 
tion, are largest in the middle, and not in the apical half; the tibie are 
scarcely expanded apically and of much slenderer form. 
Length of elytra, 8:5™". 
Florissant, Colorado. Two specimens, Nos. 420, 3975. 
EVOPES (ev@77s), gen. noy. 
Rostrum longer and slenderer than the head, which is not prolonged 
behind the eyes; eye moderately large, circular; antennal scrobes oblique 
and arcuate, passing beneath the eye; antennze very long and slender for 
this tribe, the scape gradually enlarging to the apex so as to be clavate, 
reaching the posterior margin of the eye; funicle distinctly more than half 
as long again as the scape, very slender, with obconie joints, of which the 
first two are longer than the others and subequal, the others subequal among 
themselves; club subfusiform or clongate oval, apically pointed, fully half 
