362 
COLEOPTEEA, 
former group by the author (in a group “ Cylindrocosyninm*' in table). 
L. hispinosa^ sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 56, pi. i. fig. 9, Albany, Australia. 
Inophlo&m^ g. n., id. 1. c. p. 219. Club well limited ; differs from Cylin- 
drorrhinus chiefly in having scales. I. traversi^ pi. v. fig. 4, Chatham 
Islands, inuus^ Queenstown, p. 219, villaris^ Christchurch, rhesus and 
vitiosus, Lake Guyon, New Zealand, spp. nn., id. 1. c. 
Molytides. 
Anisorrhynchus monographed ; generic and sexual characters recapitu- 
lated, and a synoptical table of the 12 known species given ; A. curtus, 
Perris, = bajulus, 01. ; A. harbarus^ Boh., and ? carinicollis, Fairm., = 
sturmi, Boh. ; A. siculus, Boh., = monachus, Boh., var., and a var. n. 
alternans is described from S. Russia, p. 188 ; Trysibius, Sch., ? = Ani- 
sorrhynchus, Sch., and T. intermedius, Boh., and olivieri, Boh., are 
dubiously referred asvarr. to T. tenebrioides, Pall.: J. Desbrochers des 
Loges, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. (5) v. pp. 161-190. 
Syagrius, g. n., F. P. Pascoe, c. p. 56. Very similar to certain spp. 
of Anchonus, but doubtless allied to from which it differs 
in its rounded, not transverse, posterior coxae, and elytra not broader , 
than prothorax. B. fulvitarsis, sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 67, Richmond River, 
Australia. 
Anisorrhynchus punctato-sulcatus, p. 170, Portugal, Spain, /aZ/aa;, p. 173, 
Spain, hespericus, p. 174, with many varr., of which sculptilis, occidentalism 
erosus, arduus, and scabratus, p. 176, and sulcatulus and elongatus, p. 177, are 
named, Spain and Portugal, gallicuSy p. 177, S. Prance, maroccanuSy 
p. 184, Morocco, spp. nn., J. Desbrochers des Loges, 1. c. 
Aparopion corsicum, sp. n., E. Perris, L’Ab. (3) i. p. 9, Corsica. 
Hyperides. 
Phytonomus rumicis (transformations noted), and P. tigrinus fre- 
quenting umbels of wild carrot ; M. R^gimbart, Feuil. Nat. v. p. 100. 
Hypera vittulataj L. Pairmaire, Ann. Mus. Genov, vii. p. 632, Tunis ; 
H. proxima, G. Capiomont (per C. E. Leprieur), Bull. Soc. Ent. Fr. (6) 
V. p. liii., and Ann. p. 467, Portugal ; spp. nn. 
. Rhadinosomides.^^ 
P. P. Pascoe, Ann. N. H. (4) xvi. p. 68, is “ inclined to consider that 
Rhadinosomus and the two genera” recorded infra “ constitute a distinct 
and isolated sub-family, which will be found, like Methypora (another 
anomalous genus), to have a place near Aterpinae.” “ Lacordaire has 
referred Rhadinosomus to his tribe Brachyderides — an unsatisfactory 
position — as it is not adelognathous, and there is nothing resembling 
it in any of the adelognathous groups to which the Brachyderides 
belong.” 
Euthyphasis, g. n., id. 1. c. p. 57. Resembles Rhadinosomus. E. acuta, 
sp. n., id. ibid. pi. i. fig. 3, Swan River, Australia. 
Acalonoma, g. n., id. ibid. “ There is a considerable gap between this 
genus and the preceding,” of which it is regarded as an ally. No dif- 
ferential characters given. A. reducta, sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 68, pi. i. fig. 2, 
Swan River. 
