CURCULIONIDA—CURCULIONIN &—CLEONINI. oF 
specimens well preserved, have the strive with rather small sharp circular 
puncta, separated by fully their own diameter. 
Length, 10-11™; height, 55"; length of elytra, 75"; of rostrum, 
1-5™"; width of latter, 1:5™™. 
Florissant, Colorado. Seven specimens, Nos. 2717, 7359, 8069, 8682, 
10543, 11268, 11302 and 13601. 
CLEONUS PRIMORIS. 
le xa oe (7 
Head punctate, nearly as long as high; eyes circular and pretty large, 
well removed from prothorax ; rostrum as long as the head, tapering con- 
siderably, relatively slender at tip; antennz inserted beyond the middle, 
the slender clavate scape not reaching the eye, the funicle slender, a lit- 
tle longer than the scape, the joints subequal, and the club stout oval. 
Thorax obscure, punctate. Klytra with close rows of very delicate striz, 
apparently very finely punctate, each interspace with a row of short, fine 
bristles. 
Length, excluding rostrum, 6"; rostrum, 1°3""; width of body, 3°6™". 
Florissant, Colorado. One specimen, No. 1.549, Princeton College col- 
lection. 
CLEONUS FOERSTERI. 
Bla, ies 2 
The head is uniformly and profusely punctate, the eye very large, 
transverse, subfusiform, completely crossing the head on a side view ; ros- 
trum fully as long as the head, stout at base, regularly and gently tapering 
throughout, feebly arcuate and rounded at tip; the antennz are inserted 
somewhat beyond the middle of the snout, in the middle of its upper half, 
and the serobes run obliquely toward the lower portion of the eye, the scape 
extending to the posterior margin of the same. Thorax profusely punctate, 
like the head. Elytral strize composed of slender series of very delicate 
but rather sharply impressed longitudinal puncta, the interspaces with a 
median series of short bristles nearly as long as the width of the interspaces, 
q 
MON XXI 
