THE MINUTE BROWN SCAVENGER BEETLES. 655 



1257 ( ). Enicmus consimilis Mann., Germ. Zeitschr., V, 99. 



Moderately elongate, feebly convex. Color given in key. Thorax nearly 



square, sides feebly convergent behind the middle; surface with a shallow 

 median channel, its sides or carinse distinctly cutting the sub-basal trans- 

 verse depression, an additional impression on each side near the front an- 

 gles. Elytra striate with rows of coarse, subquadrate punctures ; intervals 

 slightly convex, each with a row of very fine punctures. Length 2-2.2 mm. 



Marion County; scarce. Several specimens were taken by 

 Harold Morrison from a cellar in Indianapolis in which wood was 

 stored. January 11-January 24. A European species, known in 

 this country heretofore only from Michigan. 



1258 (3781). Enicmus minutos Linn., Syst. Nat. 



1766, C75. 

 Ovate, subeonvex. Usually brown, rarely blackish or 

 brownish-yellow. Thorax larger, subquadrate, sides dis- 

 tinctly converging from front angles to base, disk finely 

 and thickly granulate. Length 1.5-2 mm. (Fig. 244.) 



IMarion County ; scarce. June 3. Collected by 

 Harold Morrison. Also in Webster collection from 

 Indiana. Occurs throughout the United States. Fig. 244. (After sharp.) 



E. aterrimus Mots., length 1.6-1.9 mm. and E. duplicatus Lee., 

 length 1.9 mm., are both known from Illinois and Michigan. 



E. maculatus Lee, 1.9-2.1 mm., occurs in Ohio and Michigan; 

 E. tenuicornis Lee, length 1.6-1,9 mm., is also recorded from New 

 York and Michigan westward. 



III. Cartodeee Thorn. 1859. (G-r., " strength -h neck.") 



Small, narrow, often depressed beetles, having the antennas 

 shorter than head and thorax, their clubs abruptly two- or three- 

 jointed ; eyes small, situated far behind the base of antennse ; thorax 

 without costs, more or less deeply and transversely impressed near 

 base ; elytra each -with six to eight close set rows of large, rounded 

 punctures; front coxa; distinctly, hind ones widely, separated. 

 One species has been taken in the State and four others perhaps 

 occur but have been overlooked on account of their small size. 

 They live about dwellings, stores or barns in ground cereals, vege- 

 table drugs, or decaying and dust-like vegetable matter. 



KEY TO INDIANA SPECIES OP CAETODERE. 



a. Antennal club three-jointed. 



6. Thorax much narrower than elytra, the latter each with seven rows 

 of piinctures. 1259. ruficollis. 



[42—23402] 



