416 APPENDIX. 



testaceris, thorace rufescente maculis irreg-ularihiis, cnjiitc posticc ahdomineque 



atris. (Long. Corp. 5 lin.) 

 Above pale-testaceous; thorax reddish and glossy, with a few irregular black 



marks on the disc ; head with two angulated marks behind, and the base of 



the abdomen black ; legs pale testaceous ; antennae the same, dusky at the 



apex. 

 Taken near Ripley. 

 Page 303. Sp. 31 b. Tel. griseipennis. Steph. Nomen. '2d edit. col. 45. — PaUide 



rufo-testaceus, thorace nitido imviaculato, octtlis atris, elytris pallide griseis. 



(Long. Corp. 5 liii.) 

 Pale testaceous-red ; thorax glossy and immaculate ; eyes black ; elytra pale 



griseous ; legs and antennae pale ; body beneath pale griseous. 

 Found near London. 



Page 304. Sp. 34. Tel. alpinus. This species forms the type of the genus 



PoDABRus, Fischer. 

 Known by the characters assigned to section B b. (p. 304). 



Page 312. Sp. 2 a. MAlachius laticeps. Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. col. 45. — 

 Viridi-csneus, hirtus, capite Intissimo, ore pallido, elytris apice thoraceque 

 angulis anticis rubris, antennarum articulo tertio brevi, (Long. corp. 3§lin.) 



Brassy-green, hairy ; head much wider than the thorax, the latter with its 

 anterior angles red ; elytra with a large spot at the apex also red ; mouth 

 pale testaceous ; antennae very much incrassated at the base in the males, 

 and both sexes with the third joint short. 



Taken near Ripley, but, apparently, rare. 



Page 314. Sp. 8 a. Mal. bipunctatus. Loudon, Mag. Hist. Nat, (Babington) 

 V. V. p. 329. — Jd. vii. p. 178 and 378. Jig. 49, b, c. — Steph. Nomen. 2d edit, 

 col. 46. — Nigro-virescens, thorace toto elytrorumque apice pallide riifis, in ipso 

 apice punctis duobus impressis nigris, tibiis tarsisque pallidis. (Long. corp. 

 Ulin.) 



Greenish-black ; the thorax entirely and apex of the elytra pale red ; at the 

 apex of the latter are two impressed black points, presenting a tuberculated 

 aspect ; tibiae and tarsi pale. 



Having but the male of this and the female of the preceding species when my 

 second edition of the Nomenclature was printed, I was inclined to think 

 they were the sexes of one species ; but an examination of Mr. Babington's 

 specimens, and the figures above referred to, set that point at rest. 



Found by Mr. Babington at Monks' wood, Hunts. 



Page 320. Sp. 7 a. fDASYTES pallipes. Illiger, Mag. v. i. 83. — Panz. Faun. 



vi.f. 11. — Sub(Enea,tomento griseo tecto, antennis apice nigris, pedibus pallidis. 



(Long. corp. 2^ lin.) 

 Brassy, clothed with a griseous pile ; apex of the antennae black, and the legs 



entirely pale. 

 Taken near London by Mr. Waterhouse. 



