222 



labiatuSj Clap. 



laminaius, Chp. 



lohicoJlis, Lea 



melasomus, Lea 



nitiduloides, Baly. 



nohilis^ Chp. 



obscuripennis, Lea 

 *ohsidianus, Clip. 

 * ophthalmicus, Suff. 



palmerstoni, Blackb. 

 *phalacroides, Baly. 



puncticollis, Lea 



punctivarius, Lea 



pygidialis, Lea 

 *pyriformis, Suff. 



quadratipennis. Lea 



rotundatus, Lea 

 ''saprinodes, Suff. 

 scutellaris, hea, 

 solitus, Lea 

 striatipennis. Lea 

 striatopunctatus , Lea 

 strigicollis, Lea 

 suhaeneus, Clip., var. 

 suharmatus, Lea 

 'trabeatus, Chp. (?) 

 triangulifer^ Lea 

 tropicus, Lea 

 ventralis, Lea 

 venustus. Lea 

 vigilans. Lea 

 viridimicans, Lea 



C. ^. Minute 



brevicollis, Lea 

 coriaceus, Lea 

 opaciceps, Lea 

 punctulum, Clip. 

 rivularis, Lea 

 rotundiformis, Lea 



species, usually entirely glabrous. 

 rufimaTvus, Lea 



similis. Lea 

 tenuifrons, Lea 

 trancj^uillus, Lea 

 vagans, L^ea 

 vicarius. Lea 



7). Front angles of prothorax of male flavout 



flcivolateralis, Lea minutus. Lea 



lateroapicalis, Lea paUipes, Lea 



^. Miscellaneous. 



brunneipennis, Lea 

 carinatus, Lea 

 flavoapicalis, Lea 



macrocephalus. Lea 

 sculptipennis, Lea 

 subsuturalis. Lea 



DiTROPiDUS CONCOLOR, Saund. 



Z). «ier, Saund. 



Z). cistellus, Germ. 



Z). maxillosus, Suff. 

 The male of this species has a large head with very- 

 prominent jaws, the labrum is large, blackish, often with the 

 sides obscurely reddish, and the inter-ocular space is wide, 

 with a large median depression; on the female the head is 

 much smaller, the jaws are very much smaller, and the inter- 

 ocular space is less. The front legs of the male are 

 considerably longer and stouter than in the female; and its 

 abdomen, ov/ing to its incurvature, has the second, third, and 

 fourth segments shorter in the middle ; the female has a large 

 apical fovea margined with, pubescence. The prothoracic 

 punctures are small but dense, and are usually, but not 

 always, feebly impressed, towards the sides tbey become more 

 or less confluent, or the sides may be substrigose. Specimens 



