1068 



FAMILY LII. — CERAMBYCIDJE. 



1974 (6399). Goes tesselata Hald., Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. X. 1847, 51. 

 Elongate, robust, subcylindrical. Dull brown ; everywhere clothed with 



very short, prostrate, brownish hairs ; elytra with small spots of yellowish 

 hairs arranged in irregular rows. Thorax finely punctured and more slen- 

 derly spined than in del) His. Elytra punctured as in that species. Length 

 20 mm. 



Marshall County: rare. June 12. Known from Xew York, 

 Georgia and Louisiana. 



1975 ( 6400) . Goes pulvebulenta Hald., Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. X, 1S47. 51. 

 Form of tesselata. Brown; uniformly clothed with short, prostrate. 



whitish hair; elytra indistinctly cross-barred at base and again behind the 

 middle with darker pale brown pubescence; scutellum sometimes clay-yel- 

 low. Thorax and elytra punctured as in tesselata. Length 19-23 mm. 



Lake. Marshall, Madison and Marion counties ; scarce. June 10- 

 July 15. Beaten from foliage of black oak. Said to breed in 

 beech and wild cherry. 



G. oculata Lee. pubescence whitish, elytra each with a small 

 black sppt one-third from apex, length 10-11 mm, is known from 

 Xew York, Ohio and Wisconsin. 



LV. Plecteodeka Lec. 1852. (Or., ''spur 4- neck.") 



Body stouter than in Goes, with stronger thoracic spines ; lower 

 margin of head behind the mentum straight, not rounded as there ; 

 antenme of males but little longer than body. One species occurs 

 in the eastern United States. 



1976 (G402). Plecteodeka scalatob Fah.. Syst. Ent.. II. 1775, 27S. 



ish pubescence.. Elytra very finely and sparsely punctate. Length 25- 

 32 mm. (Fig. 458.) 



Lake and Porter counties; scarce. August 6-September 19. 

 Occurs in the sand dune region, where it probably breeds in the 



Fig. 4-58. Natural size. (After LeConte.) 



\ 



Elongate subcyliu- 

 drical, very robust. 

 Black, shining; elytra 

 with conspicuous, dense 

 white pubescence ar- 

 ranged in irregular 

 transverse rows. Tho- 

 rax with similar pubes- 

 cence arranged so as to 

 leave a large dorsal spot 

 and a space around the 

 base of spines bare. Legs 

 and antennae sparsely 

 clothed with fine gray- 



