14 
Psyche 
[March 
58. Selenophorus sinuatus (GylL). Winged. 
59. Selenophorus discopunctatus Dej. Winged. 
60. Selenophorus puncticollis Putz. Winged. 
61. Selenophorus aeneocupreus Dej. Winged. 
62. Selenophorus nonseriatus Dari. Winged. 
63. Brady cellus cubanus Dari. Winged. 
64. Bradycellus velatus Dari. Winged. 
65. Acupalpus ( Stenolophus ) ochropezus (Say). Winged, 
“flying at dusk” (C. &B.). 
66. Masoreus brevicillus Chev. Winged. 
67. Lebia bitaeniata Chev. Winged. 
68. Lebia cyanea Dej. Winged. 
69. Lebia abdominalis Chd. Winged. 
70. Microlestes poeyi (J.-D.). The single Jamaican speci- 
men I have seen is winged, but poeyi has dimorphic 
wings in Cuba. 
71. Apenes marginalis (Dej.). Winged. 
72. Apenes coriacea (Chev.). Winged. 
73. Apenes parallela (Dej.) . Winged. 
74. Apenes aptera Dari. Known only from Blue Mts., 
5,000-7,000 ft., under stones in damp forest. Wings 
vestigial. 
75. Pentagonica flavipes picipes Dari. Winged. 
76. Colliuris tetrastigma Chd. Winged; related species fly 
actively. 
77. Colliuris limb atus (Waterh.). This is the only species 
of Carabidse recorded from Jamaica which is un- 
known to me. It is probably related to C. picta 
(Chd.) , and is probably winged. 
78. Pseudaptinus apicalis Dari. Winged. 
79. Pseudaptinus insularis Mutch. Winged. 
80. Pseudaptinus dorsalis (Brulle). Winged. 
Of the 80 species of Carabidse listed from Jamaica, some 
63 occur in the lowlands, below 1,000 ft. altitude. All of 
these 63 species, in all the diverse lowland habitats, are 
winged. Some of them are known to fly well, and it is 
likely that all, or almost all, fly occasionally. 
The middle slopes of the Jamaican mountains, above 1,000 
and below 5,000 ft., have not yet been very thoroughly col- 
lected for beetles, but a certain number of Carabidse have 
been found there. Most are winged. Half a dozen or so winged 
riparian species follow the mountain brooks up to an alti- 
