COLEOPTERA. 
549 
Bhagiutn, Dahl, [and the three following, having wings in both sexes], has the antennae simple, not more than half 
the length of the body, and the last joint of the palpi forms a triangular mass. The head is large, nearly square, 
with the eyes entire ; the sides of the thorax have a triangular tubercle. [i2. Ufasciatuni, and two or three other 
British species.] 
Rhamnusium, Meg., has the antennae rather shorter than the body, serrated, with the third and fourth joints 
shorter than the following; the eyes are evidently emarginate. R. Salicis, Fab., [an European species]. 
(and a, Dej.), has the antennae at least as long as the body, simple, with the basal joint much 
shorter than the head ; the eyes are entire, or very slightly emarginate. 
Euriptera, Serv. & Lep., has the antennae 12-jointed. [A Brazilian insect.] 
Distenia and Cometes, Serv. & Lep., have the thorax spined at the side, palpi short, antennae villose. The 
former has the elytra narrowed and terminated by a spine, in the latter they are linear and unarmed. Both are 
Brazilian. 
Stenoderus, Dej., has the antennae long, the basal joint at least as long as the head, and the body long, narrow, 
and linear ; the eyes are entire. [Exotic insects]. 
In the other species the head is suddenly narrowed immediately behind the eyes ; the antennae, inserted near 
the anterior extremity of their internal notch, are wide apart at the base ; the two prominences from which they 
spring are nearly on the same plane ; the thorax is mostly entire at the sides. These form the genus — 
Leptura proper, some of which have the thorax conical, as in Lept. armata, Gyll. {L. calcarata, Fab.), [a very 
common British species, of a black colour, with yellow marks in the elytra], whilst in others the thorax is nearly 
globular, as in L. tomentosa, [another common British species, of smaller size and black colour]. 
THE FIFTH FAMILY OF THE COLEOPTERA TETRAMERA,— 
The Eupoda,— 
Is composed of insects, the first of which (the Donacics) so closely approach the last of the Longicornes, 
that Linnseus and Geoffroy united them together, and the last of which are so close to the Chrysomelae, 
the types of the following family, that the first of these naturalists placed them in this genus. The 
parts of the mouth exhibit the same relations : thus, in the first, the tonguelet is membranous, bifid, 
or bilobed, as in the Longicornes ; the maxillae also greatly resemble theirs ; but in the terminal 
Eupodae the tonguelet is nearly square or rounded, like that of the Cyclica. The lobes of the maxillae 
are however membranous, or but slightly coriaceous, whitish, or yellowish ; the exterior is dilated at the 
tip, and has not the appearance of a palpus, which thus more nearly resembles that of the Longicornes 
than of the Cyclica. The body is more or less oblong, with the head and thorax narrower than the 
abdomen ; the antennae are filiform, or thickened at the tips, and are inserted in front of the eyes, 
which in some are entire, round, and prominent, and in others slightly notched; the hind part of the 
head enters into the thoracic cavity ; the thorax is cylindrical or transversely square ; the abdomen is 
larger compared to the other parts of the body, oblong, or in the form of a long triangle ; the joints of 
the tarsi, except the last joint, are cushioned beneath, and the penultimate joint is bifid or bilobed ; 
the hind legs are thickened in a great number, whence the origin of the family name. All these insects 
have wings, and fix themselves to the stems or leaves of plants, more especially to the Liliaceae in respect 
to many of our native species ; the larvae of some (Donacia), devour the interior of the stems of water 
plants, upon which the perfect insect is found ; those of others feed externally, but covered with their 
own excrements, which forms a kind of mantle, as in the Cassidae. 
We divide this family into two tribes, [Sagrides and Criocerides\. 
The first, Sagrides, is composed of the genus — 
Sagra, — 
The mandibles of which terminate in an acute point. The tonguelet is deeply bilobed. Some have 
the palpi filiform, the eyes emarginate, and the hind thighs very thick, with the tibiae curved. 
Megalopus, has the front of the head produced into a muzzle ; the mandibles strong and crossing each other ; 
the antennae are thickened at the tips. Handsome Brazilian beetles. See the monographs of Klug, Mannerheim, 
[and Gistl]. 
Sagra, Fabr. [first named Alurnus], is exclusively confined to South Africa, Ceylon, [Java], and China, and 
has the palpi terminated by an ovoid joint, the antennae nearly filiform, and the four anterior tibiae straight ; they 
are splendidly coloured, being golden, green, or copper-coloured. 
The others have the palpi thickened at the tips, the eyes entire, and the thighs of nearly equal thickness ; the 
body is narrow and depressed. 
Orsodachna, Latr., has the antennae filiform, composed of reversed-conical joints ; the last joint of the palpi alone 
is rather larger than the preceding, and nearly of an ovoid truncate shape. [Several small British species.] 
Psammoecusy Boudier [Crypta, Kirby], has the antennae composed of short joints, thickening to the tips, and 
