CURCULIONIDJ). 
351 
auripes, p. 351, W. Persia, /awsii, p. 352, Daghestan, G. Stierlin, Deutsche 
E. Z. 1875 [N.B. the above pagination is correct ; that given 1. c. between 
pp. 336 & 353 is wrong, though not noticed in errata] ; 0. Iwonicus, G. 
Seidlitz, Fauna Baltica, p. 400, Livland : spp. nn. 
TroglorrJiynchus haldensis^ sp. n., G. Czwalina, Deutsche E. Z. 1875, 
p. 121, Monte Baldo. 
Phyllohius armatus^ W. Roelofs, GR. Ent. Belg. xviii. p. cxxviii. 
Japan ; P. ohliquus, Desbrochers, 1. c. p. 7, Syria : spp. nn. 
Leptopides, 
Entimus plebeius, sp. n., W. Roelofs, 1. c. p. xxxviii. ? New Granada. 
Brachycerides. 
Brachycerus pradieri feeds as a larva in bulbs of A Ilium sphcero- 
cephalum ; Nouv. et Faits, 1875, p. xliv. Cf. also Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (5) 
V. p. 96, note, and Baron, Bull. 1. c. pp> civ. & clxii. 
Brachycerus uridatus. The larva feeds on iVarc^ssMS-bulbs at Antibes, 
destroying large quantities of them ; A. Laboulbene, quoting Picart, 
Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (5) v. p. 95. 
Brachycerus algirus, F., occurs in Illyria ; and depreciatory observa- 
tions are made with reference to Desbrochers’ descriptions and multi- 
plication of species in this genus : G. Kraatz, Deutsche E. Z. 1875, 
p. 233. Observations on characters, &c., of various allied species ; 0. 
sinuatus, 01., and cegyptiacus, 01., are specifically distinct fromy wnfaj, Licht.; 
B. tauricus, Desbr., z=junix, Licht. : id. 1. c. pp. 421 & 422. 
Byrsopides. 
Gronops seminiger, All., = lunatus, ^ , var. ; J. Weise, Deutsche E. Z. 
1875, p. 128. 
Amy derides. 
Alexirrhea singularis, sp. n., F. P. Pascoe, Ann. N. H. (4) xvi. p. 55, 
Swan River, Australia. 
Rhyparosomides. 
Stenotdrsus, Schon., nec Perty (1832, Endomychidce), renamed Ithy- 
phallus ; E. v. H^arold, 0. H. xi. p. 143. 
Phrynixus, g. n., F. P. Pascoe, 1. c. p. 221; Scrobes foveiform, eyes 
small, remote from prothorax ; penultimate tarsal joint entire, other- 
wise most nearly allied to Dichotrachelus, in which it is more or less 
bilobed (Lacordaire’s description being wrong). P. terreus, sp. n., id. ibid. 
pi. V. fig. 2, New Zealand. 
Cecyropa, g. n., id. ibid. Dubiously placed here, on account of the 
cavernous corbels of its posterior tibias ; with some analogy at least to 
Dysostines, and at any rate to be placed in Sect. A of Lacordaire’s Pha- 
nerognathes symmerides. C. tychioides, sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 222, pi. v. fig. 3, 
Pitt’s Island, Wellington. 
Gylindrorrhinides. 
Lycosura, g. n., Pascoe, 1. c. p. 55. With the long scape and rostrum of 
this group, and elongate metasternum of the Hylobiides. Placed in the 
