Longicorn Coleoptera of the West India Islands. Ill 
BuoMiADES, Thomson. 
103. Bromiades hrachyptera, Chevr. 
Odontocera hrachypteraj Chevr., Rev. Zoologique^ 1838, 
p. 285 j Duval, Sagra's Hist. Cuba, Ins., p. 269, 
pi. 10, fig. 9. 
Bromiades hrachyptera, Thorns., Syst. Ceramb., p. 165. 
Rah. Cuba ; and Colombia (apiid Bates). 
103a. Acyphoderes ahdominalis, Oliv. (= olivieri, Bates). 
Necydalis ahdominalis, Oliv., Ent.iv., 74, p. 8, pi. l,fig.5. 
Hah. Porto Rico {apud Gundlach); Cayenne, Amazons, 
Peru, and Nicaragua. 
Tethlimmena, Bates. 
104. TetJdimmena hasalis, sp. n. (PI. II., fig. 4.) 
Head, prothorax, and elytra testaceous, covered above with a 
very short tawny-yellow pubescence ; with a large spot covering 
the posterior fourth of each elytron, and a large oblong ovate spot, 
common to both elytra, and reaching from the base to near the 
middle, black and opaque. That part of the head lying between, 
and immediately surrounding, the eyes is also black. Hind-breast 
and abdomen glossy black ; the second segment of the latter with 
a transverse depression, occupied by a brush of tawny hairs. Legs 
black, glossy, and sparsely ciliate, with the stalks of the clavate 
femora yellowish- testaceous. Antennas dull black, longer than the 
body in the male, and with the joints only very slightly dilated, 
scarcely as long as the body in the female, with the joints after 
the second dilated to a moderate extent, with the fifth and 
following joints gradually diminishing in width, so that the last 
three or four do not seem to be appreciably dilated. The pro- 
thorax, impunctate, is obtusely tubercled on each side. On each 
side of the disk, just above the lateral tubercle, is an obtuse, 
slightly-raised area, circumscribed by a narrow groove. The elytra 
are thickly and rather strongly punctured. The antennae have a 
short posterior fringe of setae extending from the second to the 
fourth or fifth joint ; it is less dense in the male than in the 
female. Long. 6—7 mm. 
Hah. St. Vincent (H. H. Smith). 
This species is very distinct from TetJilimmena aliena, 
Bates (Trans. Ent. Soc, 1872, p. 185 ; Biologia C. A. 
