24:0 On Some New 



New Mexico (Fort Wingate 1). Dr. E. W. Shufeldt. 



This species differs from latirostris Lee. in its deeply [sulcate 

 elytra. Its facies is very different from that of Shufeldti. In 

 both, the postocular lobes are broad and strong, with very long 

 dense fimbriae. 



In Shufeldti the second ventral segment is about one-half 

 longer than the third, while in sulcipennis it is just perceptibly 

 longer than the third. 



There is no species in the cabinet of LeOonte which is at all 

 similar to either of those above described. 



EUPAGODER£^ Horn, 



E. Dunnianus n. sp. — Moderately robust, convex, very densely 

 clothed throughout with white scales, sometimes feebly and unevenly 

 mottled with gray; scales overlapping on the elytra, closely crowded 

 and polygonal on the head and prothorax; setae very short, sparse, and 

 erect anteriorly; longer, much denser, subrecumbent, and squamiform 

 on the elytral intervals, absent from the striae, where there are exces- 

 sively minute, erect white hairs which are very distant. Head short, 

 strongly transverse, evenly, feebly convex longitudinally, and slightly 

 more strongly so in a transverse line between the eyes; beak one-half 

 longer than wide, slightly narrower than the head, feebly, abruptly 

 dilated at apex; surface broadly and very feebly convex, declivous at 

 apex where there is a small triangular emargination, between the 

 antennae a small deep elongate fovea, and, on each side above, from 

 near the base of each antenna to slightly beyond basal third, a straight, 

 feebly-impressed channel; surface of head and beak finely, evenly, and 

 sparsely punctate; antennae inserted at apical third; scape short, robust, 

 gradually clavate, two-thirds as long at the funicle; first joint of the 

 latter as long as the next two together, outer joints slightly and grad- 

 ually wider, seventh close to the club throughout its width, nearly one- 

 half wider than long; club small, ovoidal, pointed; scarcely wider than 

 the apex of the scape, not distinctly annulate. Prothorax distinctly 

 wider than long; sides parallel, almost evenly and moderately arcuate; 

 disk coarsely, sparsely, and somewhat unevenly punctate, with a sub- 

 apical fmedian elongate fovea. Elytra evenly oval, truncate at base, 

 two and one-half times longer and three-fourths wider than the pro- 

 thorax; striae very fine, very finely, feebly, and remotely punctate. 

 Length 9.5-11.5 mm. 



Texas (El Paso 7). Mr. G. W. Dunn. 



Allied to decipiens Lee, but differs in its more transverse 

 prothorax and very fine, scarcely punctate elytral striae. In 

 this species the males and females differ but slightly in form. 



