THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 95 
233. CLYTUS LUNULATUS Airby.—Length of body 7% lines. One 
specimen taken in Lat. 54°. Taken also in Canada by Dr. Bigsby, and 
in Nova Scotia by Capt. Hall. 
_[176.] This species is extremely similar to the preceding, but its bands 
and spots are quite white without any tint of yellow: the prothorax has 
no posterior interrupted band, the anterior spot of the elytra is crescent or 
kidney-shaped, the thighs are dusky; and the eyes are black; but the 
most striking distinction is exhibited by the head, which is perfectly 
smooth and without punctures, but when the occiput is disengaged from 
the prothorax, as it is when the head is inclined forwards, the front will be 
found to be separated from it by a bilobed line, behind which the head is 
thickly and confluently punctured. 
| Probably a variety of the preceding species. | 
574 lines. A single 
specimen taken in Lat. 54°. 
This species resembles the last in having the occiput similarly punc- 
tured, and the markings of the elytra are similar, except that instead of 
the white streak at the base there is only a dot: but it is of a brown 
colour, with the head and prothorax nearly black : the former is distinctly 
granulated ; the palpi, labrum, eyes, and antennae are rufous, as in C. 
undatus, and like that the prothorax has both an anterior and posterior 
interrupted band of white hairs; the elytra and underside of the body are 
reddish-brown ; the legs rufous, saostcniot ones very long. 
[Taken at Ottawa and other places in Ontario. | 
235. CLYTUS LONGIPES K7rby. 
single specimen taken in Lat 54°. 
Length of body 5% lines. A 
[177.] Body reddish brown, underneath hairy, with white decumbent 
hairs. Head black, minutely and thickly punctured, with a longitudinal 
slight channel, transversely elevated between the antennae; vertex ele- 
vated; palpi, labrum, antennae and extremity of the nose, rufous: pro- 
thorax black, rather oblong, elevated longitudinally in the disk with an 
anterior bowed transverse ridge, followed by several minute acute tuber- 
cles, next in the middle is another shorter ridge, which is also succeeded 
by similar tubercles: the sides of the prothorax are granulated ; between 
the granulated portion and elevated disk, it is minutely reticulated, with a 
pore in the centre of each reticulation: elytra brown, subacute, with three 
bands formed of decumbent white hairs; the first forming a crescent at 
