96 
Mr. Charles J. Galian on the 
with the posterior (or inner) spine of each about twice as long as 
the anterior spine. 
Male. Pro thorax with a small spine just behind the middle oO 
each side ; Avith a strongly punctured transverse area underneath, 
which extends outwards and expands as a slightly convex area on 
each side. 
Fem. Prothorax with an almost obsolete tubercle or callosity 
behind the middle of each side, and with a similar black-coloured 
tubercle between this and the anterior margin. 
Hah. Porto Eico (3 and ?), Guadeloupe (Lher- 
minier), and St. Thomas ( ? ? only). 
This species seems to answer better than any I have 
yet seen to Linnets description of Cerambyx quadri- 
maculatus. Fabricius^s description of Stenocoriis quadri- 
maculatus does not appear to have been based upon any 
actual specimens, and is evidently a mere repetition of 
that given by Linne. 
60. Ehuria odomaculataj Chevr., Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr., 
1862, p. 265. 
Hah. Dominica (Eamage and Dr. Nicholls), Guade- 
loupe (Delauney and Vitrac) and Cuba (Chevr. collection). 
The prothorax is distinctly spined at the sides in both sexes of 
this species ; it is somewhat naked and transversely rugose in the 
middle above ; on each side there is a greyish silky patch of 
pubescence emarginate on its upper border. On the underside of 
the prothorax in the male there is a strongly-punctured transverse 
and convex area clothed with a rather thick silky pubescence, and 
extending on each side as far as the lateral spine. 
61. Ehuria stigma, Oliv. 
Ceramhyx stigmUj Oliv., Entomologie iv., No. 67, 
p. 126, pi. 23, fig. 18U. 
Ehuria duvalii, Chevr., Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr., 1862, p. 266. 
Hah, Haiti and Cuba j also Nicaragua and N. America. 
Usually of a brownish-testaceous colour, veiled by a rather 
dense greyish pubescence. Prothorax spined on the middle of each 
side, and with a very small obtuse tubercle between this and the 
anterior margin ; the disk with two small and acute black tubercles 
a little in front of the middle. Elytra closely and rather strongly 
punctured from the base to beyond the middle, with the punctures 
thence quickly diminishing in number and size, so that the pos- 
terior third is almost entirely impunctate ; each with two pairs of 
