FAMILY GALERUCID^E. 133 



Chrysomela tremi la. ( Plate xiv, figs. 5, 6 & 7 : larva and pupa.) 



Head, thorax, body, antenna? and legs blue : elytra brown, finely punctured. 

 Foreign : its larva feed upon the leaves of the poplar. 



Chrysomela banksii. 

 Immaculate, obtusely ovate : head very small ; antennae luteous ; thorax with the lateral 

 edges thickened. Color dark brown, glossy, impunctate. Elytra of the same color as 

 the thorax, punctated : beneath, the same color as above; soles of the tarsi cream- 

 colored. Length nearly one-fourth of an inch. 



Chrysomela Americana. 

 Form ovate. Color brown, glossy : eyes black ; thorax and head impunctate. Elytra punc- 

 tate in four double rows, besides the sutural one : between the rows the surface is 

 flat, impunctured, and. of a brassy bronze reflection ; the punctured lines are purplish. 

 Length one-eighth of an inch. 



Galeracidae. 



This family is exemplified by those very common striped beetles which infest aud destroy 

 the cucumber plant. They are oblong, and are furnished with a small head and a narrow 

 thorax. Their antenna; are about half as long as their bodies, of a uniform thickness, and 

 inserted near together and near the mouth. Their legs are of an equal size, though in some 

 the thighs are formed for leaping. They are small insects and vegetable feeders, and often 

 do considerable damage in gardens. 



The family is divided by Westwood into two subfamilies : 1. Galerucides; 2. Hal- 

 ticides. 



Galerucides. 



Genus ADIMONIA (Schrank). 



Antennae eleven-jointed, filiform throughout, and nearly equaling the body in length : 

 joints mostly cylindric ; the last acute, and pointed outwards ; the second the shortest, 

 obconic ; the third next in length, the two equaling the first or fourth ; the remainder 

 equaling the first or fourth : labrum entire : palpi indeterminate. Head small, exsert : 

 eyes prominent : body ovate, elongate : legs rather long, equal or subequal ; ] oste- 

 rior thighs only moderately incrassate. 



