408 APPENDIX. 



vations in pages 71 and 81, and to have looked at columns 29 and 30 of my 

 Nomenclature, he would not thus have ventured to blind his readers by a 

 false statement, my remarks being published in June, 1830, and Mr. 

 Curtis's in June 1834! 



Page 81. Sp. 1. Phi.oiophilus Edwardsii has been taken in Derbyshire, &c. 

 and I am indebted to C. C. Babington and F. Walker, Esqs. for specimens. 



Page 77. Sp. 9 a. -fCRYPTorHAGUs scutellatus. Eni. Mag. (^Newman) v. ii. 



p. 202. — Fusciis, scutcllo nigra, elytri.i pedibvsque testaceis. (Long. corp. 



1 lin.) 

 Head, thorax, and under side dark brown; eyes and scutellum black; 



antennas brown at the base, and testaceous at the apex ; elytra testaceous ; 



legs the same, with the femora darker. 

 In the collection of G. Wailes, Esq. 



Page91.fip. 1 a. tTsTRATOMA pallida. Curtis. — Steph. 2^omcn. 2d edit. col. 31. 

 — If the insect by this name in Mr. Davis's cabinet be correctly named (and 

 I have no reason to doubt the contrary), it appears to be an immature 

 variety only of Tet. bicolor. 



Page 91. Sp. 3. fTEX picta. JEnt. Mag. (Newman) v. ii. p, 202. — Tet. ma- 

 culipennis. Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. col. 31. — Nigra, thoracis marginibus, 

 elytrorumque maculis decern ferrugineis. (Long. corp. \^ lin.) 



Black; head fuscous; thorax with the entire margin ferruginous; elytra with 

 ten ferruginous spots, placed one on the shoulder, one towards the apex of 

 the outer margin, two on the disc, two on the suture, common to both elytra. 



In Mr. Wailes' collection. 



Page 94. Sp. 3 a. Ips 6-pustulata. Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. col. 31. — Lata, 

 suhdepressa, nigra nitida, concinne punctulata, elytris maculis tribus ovatis 

 rubris. (Long. corp. 3 lin.) 



Broad, somewhat depressed, shining black; head and thorax very finely 

 punctured, elytra rather coarsely punctured, with two ovate red spots at 

 the shoulders, placed obliquely, and a larger transverse one near the apex 

 on the disc ; legs pitchy. 



Inhabits the vicinity of London. 



Page 94. Family CORTICARID^.— In the note in p. 1, and in p. 57, I 

 suggest that the Engidae require subdivision, a suggestion subsequently 

 acted upon by the adoption of the above family, which may be discriminated 

 from the Engidse, in a general point of view, by the short characters given 

 in § C. of page 58 : the species, with slight exceptions, being all tetra- 

 merous. 



Page 95. Nemosoma elongatum. Near Cambridge, in May 1834, by 

 J. L. Brown and C. C. Babington, Esqs. 



