COLEOPTERA. 
511 
Zeitschrift fur die Entomologie, have minutely investigated their structure, and have proposed a s;reat number of 
groups in addition to tliose given in the text, often, it is true, resting upon very minute and obscure characters.] 
Our second section, Malacodermi, is divisible into five tribes. 
The first, Celrionites, so named from the genus Cebrio, Oliv., to which some others are added, has 
the mandibles terminated in a single point ; the palpi of equal thickness throughout, or slender at the 
tip ; the body rounded and swollen in some ; oval or oblong, hut arched above and bent down in front, 
in others. It is often soft and flexible, with the thorax transverse, broadest at the base, with the 
lateral angles elongated and acute in some ; the aiite;m® are ordinarily longer than the head and 
thorax. The feet are not contractile. Their habits are unknown; many are, however, found upon 
plants in moist places. They may be united into a single genus, 
Cebrio, Oiiv., Fabr. 
In a first subsection, establishing a connexion between this and the preceding tribe, the species have the body 
of a consistence as solid as in the Sternoxi, and of an oblong-ovate form ; the mandibles advanced beyond the 
iabruin, narrow, very much bent ; the antennae fiabellate or pectinated in the males of most of the species, or 
rather thickened at the tips. This subsection consists (with one exception) of species not inhabiting our country, 
and comprises several genera, including Physodactylus and Cebrio, in which the prosternum is produced into a 
point, and received into a notch of the mesosternum ; and Anelastes, Kirby ; Callirhipis, Latr. ; Sandalus, Knoch. ; 
Rhipicera, Latr., Ptilodactyla, Illiger; most of which are formed of South American insects, the males of 
many of which are remarkably distinguished by their branched or pectinated antennae. These also differ from the 
preceding in the prosternum not being remarkably prolong'ed into a point, and in the mesosternum wanting the 
frontal impression. In several of the last-named genera the joints of the tarsi are lobed beneath, and in the genus 
Dascillns, Latr. ; Atopa, Fabr., which has the 11-jointed antennse simple in both sexes, the three basal join of 
the tarsi are without these membranous lobes, but the fourth joint is deeply bilobed, and the terminal joint 
without an appendage between the claws. Type, Atopa cervina, Fab. common British insect. 
In the second division of the Cebrionites the mandibles are small, but little or not at all extended beyond the 
labrum ; the body generally soft, nearly hemispheric or ovoid, and the palpi pointed at the tip. The antennae are 
simple, or but slightly toothed ; in many the hind-feet are used for leaping. They frequent aquatic places. 
[These are minute insects.] 
Elodes, Latr.; Cyplion, Fab., Dej., has the posterior thighs scarcely differing in size from the others. [Several 
minute British species.] 
Ecyrtes, Latr., has the hind thighs very large, and used for leaping. These two have the penultimate joint of 
the tarsi bilobed ; in the two following it is entire. 
Nycteus, Latr., has the third joint of the antennse very minute, and the spurs of the hind tibiae distinct. 
Euhria, Zeigl., has the second joint of the antennse minute, and the spurs of the hind tibiae almost obsolete. 
Cyplion palustris, Germar. [A minute species, recently captured in Scotland.] 
The second tribe of the Malacodermi, that of the Lampxy rides, is distinguished from the preceding 
by the thickened tips of the palpi, or at least of the maxillary palpi ; the body always soft, straight, | 
depressed, or scarcely convex ; and the thorax, either semicircular or nearly square, advanced over the I 
head, which it wholly or partly covers. The mandibles are generally small, terminated in a slender 
curved point, entire at the tip ; the penultimate joint of the tarsi is always bilobed, and the ungues of 
the tarsi are neither toothed nor furnished with any appendage. The females of some species are desti- 
tute of wings, or have only short elytra. When seized, these insects fold their antennae and feet close 
to the body, without making any movement, as if dead ; many also bend down the abdomen. They 
form the genus 
Lampyris, Linn. 
A first division has the antenns arising close together ; the head either free and produced into a muzzle, or 
entirely concealed beneath the thorax, with the eyes of the males very large and globular, and the mouth small. 
Lycus, Fab., having the muzzle very long ; 
Dictyoptera, Latr., with the muzzle very short ; and 
Omalisus, Geolfr., without any distinct muzzle ; are distinguished for the want of the power of emitting light. 
[There is one British species, L. minutus, Fabr., belonging to the second of these groups ; it is small, of a black 
colour, with red elytra.] 
The other Lampyrides of this first division differ from the former, not only in not having a muzzle, and in 
having the head, which is occupied almost entirely by the eyes in the males, entirely or nearly hidden beneath 
the semicircular or square thorax ; but also in a very remarkable property which they ipossess, either common to 
both sexes or peculiar to the females alone — that of being phosphorescent ; whence these insects have obtained 
the names of Glow-worms and Fire-flies. The body of these insects is very soft, especially the abdomen : the 
luminous matter occupies the under-side of the two or three terminal segments of this part of the body, which are 
differently coloured, and generally yellow or white. The light they emit is more or less bright, and of a greenish- 
white, or white colour, like that of different kinds of phosphorus. It appears that these insects are able at will 
