1066 



FA ailLY LII. — CERAMBYCID^. 



1969 (6392). Doecaschema altbbnatdm Say, Journ. Phil. Acad. Nat. Sci., 

 Ill, 1823, 405 ; ibid. II, 188. 

 Elongate, slender, cylindrical. Brown, sparsely clothed with prostrate 

 gray pubescence; thorax with four narrow stripes of clay yellow pubes- 

 cence ; elytra each with three rows of irregular sjwts of similar pubescence, 

 those of middle row the larger. Thorax sparsely and finely punctured, with 

 an elongate median smooth space. Elytra more coarsely punctured ; each 

 with an irregular bare space behind the middle, this densely and confluently 

 punctured. Length 8-12 mm. 



Southern two-thirds of State; frequent. May 24-July 7. 



1070 (6393). DoncASCHEMA nigbum Say, Joui-n. Phil. Acad. Nat. Sci., V, 

 1827, 272 ; ibid. II. .330. 

 Elongate, slender, cylindrical. T'nifunii dull' blaclt. Hf;\d with a nar- 

 ro\\' raised line. Thorax finely granulate-rugose. Elytra minutely granu- 

 late, sparsely, rather finely and deeply punctate. Length 8-10 mm. 



Throughout the State; frequent. June 5-July 8. Breeds in 

 hickory, in the dead tmgs of which it occurs in numbers. 



LIII. Hetcemis I-IaLd. 1847. (CIr., "in sight" or "at hand.") 



Differs from the preceding by having the elytra narrowed and 

 pointed at tip. The antenna are slender, tapering, double the 

 length of the body, the third joint longest, twice the length of 

 fourth, fifth slightly longer than fourth. One species is known 

 from the eastern United States. 

 1971 (6394). Hetoemis cineeea Oliv., Ent, IV, 170.5, G8. 



Elongate, slender, cylindrical. Black, densely clothed with short, gray- 

 ish, prostrate pubescence. Antenna; naked, black. Thorax cylindrical, 

 slightly longer than wide, narrower than elytra, the middle third with a 

 smooth dorsal line. Elytra rather densely and coarsely punctured, the 

 punctures hidden by the dense pubescence. length 8-12 mm. 



Throughout the State; frequent. 

 :\lay 16-July 7. Breeds in walnut, mul- 

 berry, osage orange and hickory, about 

 the dead limbs of which it may be found. 



Cacoplia iniUatn Hald, clothed with 

 soft gray pubescence, length 10-16 mm., 

 is known from New York, Pennsylvania, 

 Ohio and southward. 



LIV. OoES Lee. ls,-)2. (fir., "mag- 

 ical.") 

 Robust spoclo'i, having the legs rather 

 short and sulioqiiMl in size; scape of an- 



E5g. 456. GocspuMraHiild. (After to-nn.Ti „-;n, J- j.- _, i., 



».ith in fifth Rep. U. S. Ent CommJ ^®™^^ ^^'"^ ^ dlStlUCt SCJir-hkp imprCS- 



sion near api'x; thoi';ix cyliudricia with 



