PANTOMORUS OF AMERICA NORTH OF MEXICO 19 
ruptly finer and sparser in a broad, median stripe, intercoxal piece 
as wide as hind coxa; corbel plate absent or virtually so (fig. 2, 
H) duct of spermatheca membranous 
(Asynonychus proper)—(4) godmani (Crotch) (p. 19) 
Derm black, covered by a dense coating of gray or gray and brownish 
scales; rostrum obviously tapering, latero-marginal carina feeble, 
intercarinal area not concave; mandibles with supports shorter, 
scars facing approximately forward, left mandible obtusely toothed 
on mesal edge above; scape exceeding eye by distinctly less than 
length of first funicular segment; puncture row 10 of elytron obso- 
lete medially ; vestiture on abdominal sternites subevenly distributed, 
intercoxal piece plainly narrower than hind coxa; corbel plate pres- 
ent, Squamose (fig. 2, 7) ; duct of spermatheca sclerotized. (Aramvi- 
GUSHOLEEL OTD) fc Sete s PE opi aes Reenter 1y> Dare ty Pla A ee 2 
2. Length 5-6.5 mm; usually mottled with brown; prothoracic to elytral 
length about as 1 to 2.6; elytron feebly or not impressed just mesad 
of humeral angle; apical margin of abdominal sternite 5 subtruncate 
(OY SS eT) ee hes ae, SD Sea (5) tessellatus (Say) (p. 21). 
Length 6.5-S mm; not brownish mottled, usually subuniformly gray; 
prothoracic to elytral length about as 1 to 8; elytron with a usually 
distinct impression just mesad of humeral angle; apical margin of 
abdominal sternite 5 rounded or subacuminate, often with a small 
lobesaitamid dlek Gig aaj) ee ees ee (6) pallidus (Horn) (p. 23). 
(4) PANTOMORUS (ASYNONYCHUS) GODMANI (Crotch) 
(Figs. 2, H, UM. R; 4, C; 5, B) 
Asynonychus godmani Crotch, Zool. Soc. London Proc. 1867; 389, pl. xxiii; 
Leng, Catalogue of the Coleoptera of America North of Mexico, Sup. 1, 
Dp: 47, 1927. 
Aramigus fulleri Horn, Amer. Phil. Soc. Proc. 15: 94, 1876; Horn, Canad, Ent. 
16: 184, 1884 (early occurrence in United States); Harrington, Canad. 
Ent. 23: 23, 1891 (local outbreak in Canada); Schwarz, Ent. Soc. Wash. 
Proce. 8: 145, 1895 (note on history in U. 8.) ; Chittenden, U. S. Div. Ent. 
Bull. (n. s.) 27: 88-96, fig. 24, 1901; Koebele, U. S. Div. Ent. Bull. (n. s.), 
30: 88-90, 1901; Pierce, Nebr. State Bd. Agr. Ann. Rept. 1907: 255; Solari, 
Boll. Soe. Ent. Ital. 40: 268, 1908 (occurrence in Italy and elsewhere) ; 
Pierce, Jour. Econ. Ent. 3: 361, 1910. 
Pantomorus olindae Perkins, Fauna Hawaiiensis, v. 2, pt. 3, p. 180, 1900. 
Pantomorus fulleri (Horn), Perkins, Fauna Hawaiiensis, vy. 3, pt. 6, p. 653, 1910; 
ibid., v. 1, pt. 6 (prefatory section), p. exx, 1913; Champion, Biologia Cen- 
trali-Americana, v. 4, pt. 3, p. 333, 1889-1911 (1911) ; Pierce, U. S. Natl. Mus. 
Proc. 45: 417, 1913; Blatchley and Leng, Rhynchophora of North Eastern 
America, pp. 124, 125, fig. 49, 1916; Aurivillius, Coleoptera-Curculionidae, 
Natural History of Juan Fernandez and Haster Island, ed. by C. Skotts- 
berg, v. 8, p. 463, 1926 (literature); Tanner, Amer. Ent. Soc. Trans. 53: 
34, pl. 18, figs. 179-180, 1927 (2 genitalia). 
Pantomorus godmani (Crotch), Hustache, Bull. Soc. Ent. France 1922: 100: 
Champion, Ent. Mo. Mag. 58: 161, 1922; Essig, Insects of Western North 
America, p. 491, 1926; Clerc, Bull. Soe. Ent. France 1928: 290; Bradley, Bull. . 
Brooklyn Hnt. Soc. 25: 261, 1930; Barrett, Calif. Univ. Pubs., Ent. 5: 90-91, 
figs. 1, 7, 18, 19, 1980; Lockwood and Keifer, Calif. Dept. Agr. Monthly 
Bull. 19: 29, pl. 1, figs. 6, 6 b, and pl. 3, fig. 23, 1930 (chiefly on larva) ; 
Essig, A History of Entomology, pp. 173-177, figs. 69-70, 1931; Ting, Micro- 
entomology, 1: 95, 98, 99, 102, figs. 76, 81, 1936 (mouth parts). 
“Naupactus ovulum Jek. in litt.” (Hustache, Bull. Soc. Ent. France 1922: 100). 
“2Naupactus subvittatus Fairm. and Germain, Coleoptera Chilensia, II, 1861, 
p. 7.” (Hustache, ibid.). As pointed out farther on, the description of 
subvittatus F. and G. does not seem to fit godmani. 
Most of the references in economic literature are omitted; they can 
be consulted in Colcord’s index and in the Junk Catalog. 
Length 6-8.5 mm. Derm brownish to piceous, scales brownish to gray and 
not entirely covering surface, prevailing color a nearly uniform brown, brown- 
ish tan, or brownish gray; scales on sides of pronotum larger and denser than 
