434 API-ENDIX. 



spot at the apex ; tarsi ferruginoiis ; thorax rather depressed ; aiiteiinte 

 short, much thickened towards the end. 

 Also taken within the metropolitan district. 



Page 162. Genus PELLA, Stephens, 



Corresponds with § G., and also embraces Al. crassicorni«, described in p. 113. 



Page 165. Sp. 1. Callicerus Spencii. C/irtis, x. pi. M<3. — I have received 

 this insect from the Rev. G. T. Rudd, who takes it not imcommonly near 

 Stockton, and found one specimen in Battersea fields in April 1833. 



Page 165. Sp. 2. fCALL. hybridus. Cu7'ti.<i,f. 443. — Ste-ph. Nomen. ^d edit, 

 col. 95. — Niger opacus, elytris ahdoininisque segmenilbus rufescentihus, ore 

 antenriis pedihusque Jerrugineis, antennarum artictilis intermediis subelongatis. 

 (Long. corp. 2 ? lin.) 



'' Head and thorax opaque dusky black ; elytra rufescent, disc suffused with 

 brown; abdomen black, margins of segments rufescent, legs ferruginous; 

 antennsG and palpi darker;" the intermediate joints of the antennas longer, 

 and the tenth joint shorter, than in Ca. Spencii. 



*•' Tiiken at Holy wood, near Belfast, by Mr. Haliday." — Curtis, I. c. 



Page 170. Sp. 7 a. Mycetoporus nigricollis. Steph. Nomev. 9,d edit. col. 95. 

 — Latus, iiigrn niiidus, antennarum, hasi, elytris, abdominisque apice, ore, 

 jiedibusque rufis. (Long. corp. 3^ — 4 lin.) 



Broad, deep glossy black; head and thorax extremely smooth and glossy ; 

 elytra pale chestnut-red, with a row of punctures on each side the suture, 

 and another towards the margin; abdomen punctured, black, with the 

 margins of the segments slightly, and the apex broadly, castaneous ; mouth, 

 legs, and base of the antennae rufous ; posterior femora fuscous. 



Foimd near London, at South Lambeth. 



The generic name above employed is that of Mannerheim, which he charac- 

 terised previously to the appearance of my Ischnosoma, and therefore to 

 be adopted. 



Page 186. Genus TRICOPHYA, Mannerheirn, 



Corresponds with § B. b. of Tachyporus, and is thus farther characterised: — 

 AntenniB with the basal joint large, thick, clavate, second as stout, but shorter, 

 su.bglobose, the remainder extremely slender, of equal length, and furnished 

 with long verticillated hairs; maxillary palpi with the terminal joint as 

 stout as the preceding one, acuminated at the end ; body somewhat de- 

 pressed ; head rounded, not concealed ; thorax short, transverse, slightly 

 margined, rounded on the sides and behind; /e^^5 rather long ; tarsi with. 

 nearly equal joints. 



Page 190. Sp. 7 a. Conurus pyrrhopterus. Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. col. 97. — 

 Rufo-testaceus, nifidus, oculis elytrisqiiefuscescentibus, pedibus pallidis, antennis 

 piceis, basi pallida. (Long. corp. 1^ lin.) 



Testaceous-red, shining; thorax paler; eyes dusky-black; elytra brown'sh; 

 legs pale ; antennae the same, with the apex pltrhy. 



Found in the vicinity of London. 



