AVPEX'DIX. o69 



and a detached humeral spot deep ferruginous ; mouth, antennae, and legs 

 ferrughious, the latter pubescent. 

 Taken near Dorking by iVlr. "Waterhouse. 



Page 33. Sp. 3 b. Tarus coadunatus. Steph. Nonien.'Zd edit. col. 3. — Cymindis 

 coadunatus. De Jean^ Col. i. 210. — Niger, pundatus, thorace rufo, elytrisbasi 

 profundepunctato, margine laterali maculaque humerali cum. margine cohcerente, 

 ore antennisqueferrugineis,pedibuspallidioribus. (Long. corp. 4 lin.) 



Resembles the precedhig species ; deep black, punctate, very slightly pubes- 

 cent ; thorax red, somewhat wide and convex, rather thickly punctured 

 anteriorly; elytra a little depressed, striated, with the striae moderately 

 impressed, the interstices at the base very closely punctate, and rather 

 sparingly so towards the apex, the lateral margin deep ferruginous, united 

 at the base to a patch of the same colour on the shoulder : legs pale ferru- 

 ginous : mouth and antennae ferruginous. 



Found near London. 



Page 33. Sp. 3 c. |Tarus Homagricus. Curtis, folio 235. — Steph. Nomen. 

 "M edit. col. 3. — Lebia Homagrica. Buft. Faun. Aust. ii. 240. — Niger, 

 punctatus, thorace, ore antennisque rujis, elytris margine exteriori lineolaqug 

 kuvierali pedibusqueferrugineo-palUdis. (Long. corp. 4 — 4§ lin.) 



Blackj punctured : head glossy-black ; thorax a little elongated, bright red : 

 elytra striated, the striae shallow, and not deeply punctured; the outer 

 margin pale ferruginous, and a slightly elongated detached spot at the 

 shoulders: legs pale ferruginous : antennae and mouth red. 



Foimd in Norfolk. 



Page 177. Sp. 4 a. Tarus basalis. Curtis, v. v. pi. 235.— Taken abundantly 

 in various parts of Yorkshire and of the North. 



Page 40. Sp. 1 a. Dyschirius inermis. Curtis, v. viii. pi. 854. — Chalybeo 

 nitidus, ore antennisque fernigineis, tibiis anticis extrorsum inermibus. (Long, 

 corp. 2J lin.) 



" Shining bluish-black, robust, trophi and antennae ferruginous, the latter 

 blackish towards the apex : thorax with a transverse channel before and a 

 deep one down the middle, with a transverse row of punctures at the base : 

 elytra ovate, with eight punctured striae on each, the third from the suture 

 having three larger points: legs continuous, the thighs darker: anterior 

 tibiae terminated by two strong spires, the outer ones being rather largest 

 and incurved." — Curtis, I- c. 



Locality unknown : 1 possess a specimen agreeing with the above definition, 

 which was taken on the coast of Norfolk. 



Page 42. Sp. 5 a. Dyschirius lufipes. De Jean, Col. i. i\>2%.— Supra bninneo- 

 ameus, tibiis anticis apice bispinosis, extrorsum obsolete bidenticuhitis, elytris 

 ovatis prnfunde striatu-jmnctatis, sfriis apice abbreviatis, antennis pcdihusque 

 rufis. (Long. corp. 14 lin.) 



Mandibulata, Vol. V., Feb. 28th, 1835. 2 b 



