78 BULLETIN 417, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



A few larvae hatched from eggs in 1913, but all died in the first and 

 second stages. Large caterpillars and pupae of Porihetria disbar were 

 offered, and the beetle larvae fed upon them readily. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



1844. Guerin-Meneville,M. Description de Coleopteres nouveaux decouverts par 

 M. A. Nieto dans L'interieur du Mexique. In Revue Zoologique, ser. 1, v. 7, 

 p. 253-262. 



Page 255. Original description of the species and comparisons made of the angled thorax to that 

 of C. angulatum Che v. 



1863. LeConte, J. L. Notes on the species of Calosoma inhabiting the United 

 States. JttProc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. f. 1862, v. 14, p. 52-53. 



Description of Calosoma carbonatum from New Mexico, upper Texas, and Lower California. 



1877. Popenoe, E. A. A list of Kansas Coleoptera. In Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci. f. 

 1876, v. 5, p. 21-40. 

 Page 22. "Western Kansas." 



1882-83. Horn, G. H. Miscellaneous notes and short studies of North American 

 Coleoptera. In Trans. Amer. Ent, Soc, v. 10, p. 269-312, pi. 9. 

 Page 270. The writer places C. carbonatum Lee. as a synonym of C. peregrinator Guer. and also 

 corrects the misunderstanding that C. prominens Lee. is a* synonym of the latter species. 



1881-1884. Bates, H. W. Biologia Centrali- Americana, v. 1, pt. 1, 316 p., 13 pi. 



Pages 21, 262. The writer quotes Flohr as classing C. carbonatum Lee. as synonymous with C. 

 peregrinator Guer. He also states that C. peregrinator Guer. and C. prominens Lee. are distinct 

 species, although LeConte had promised to unite the latter to the former. 



1893-94. Horn, G. H. The Coleoptera of Baja California. In Proc. Cal. Acad. Sci., 

 2d ser., v. 4, p. 302-449, pi. 7-8. 

 Page 307. C. carbonatum Lee. is given as a synonym of C. peregrinator Guer. with habitat as 

 localities in southwestern United States and Mexico. ' 



1897. Coquillett, D. W. Revision of the Tachinidae of America north of Mexico. 

 U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Ent. Tech. Ser. No. 7, 154 p. 

 Page 10. Coquillett records the breeding of Biomyia georgix from Calosoma peregrinator at Los 

 Angeles, Cal., June 25, 1888. 



CALOSOMA PROMINENS Lee. 



ORIGINAL DESCRIPTION. 



Black; head very variably punctate, deeply impressed on both sides, thorax much 

 wider than long, sides angled acutely, with margin scarcely reflexed, narrowed at 

 base, somewhat rounded, finely wrinkled, punctate at posterior, elytra shining* finely 

 punctate in rows, punctures larger towards the base, interstices scarcely corrugated. 

 Length 1.3. Dead specimen about Pimas, Calif. 



This species was described by Le Conte in 1851 as Calosoma 

 angulatum, but this name was preoccupied, having been used in 

 1834 by A. Chevrolat for a very different species of Calosoma from 

 southern California. LeConte discovered this fact, and in 1853 

 proposed the name prominens for this species with the angled thorax. 

 It has been recorded from several localities in Arizona, California, and 

 New Mexico, and occurs in Mexico. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



1852. LeConte, J. L. Description of new species of Coleoptera from California. 



In Ann. Lye. Nat. Hist. N. Y. f. 1851, v. 5, p. 125-216. 



Original description of the species under the name of Calosoma angulatum. Habitat about Pimas, 

 Cal. 



1853. LeConte, J. L. Notes on the classification of the Carabidae of the United States. 



In Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc, v. 10, n. s., pt. 3, art. 27, p. 364-403. 



The writer announces the preoccupancy of Calosoma angulatum by Chevrolat and proposes to call 

 his new species, also with angled thorax, Calosoma prominens. 



