270 
COLEOPTEllA. 
Boreaj)hilu8 lewisianus nudi japonicus, spp. nn., id. 1. Japan. 
Lesteva fenestrata^ sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 97, Japan. 
Olophrum simplex^ sp. n., id. ihid.j Japan. 
Lathrimoewn fratellum [-/ws], sp. n., A. v. Rottenberg, B. E. Z. xviii. 
p. 330, Taygetus. 
Homaliumjaponicum,T>. Sharp, 1. c. p. 98, Japan ; H.apioicorne,p. 207, 
turanicurriy p. 209, Maracand, taschkentense, p. 208, River Keless, S. Solsky 
Fedclienko’s Turkestan, ii. 5 : spp. nn. 
Anthobium solitare, Sharp, 1. c. p. 98, Japan ; A. fulvipenne, Solsky, 
1. c. p. 210, Kokand : spp. nn. 
Micrcedus austinianus, sp. n., Leconte, 1. c. p. 273, White Mountains 
and Vancouver Island. 
Protinides. 
Megarthrus japonicus^ parallelus, p. 99, conveocus, p. 100, spp. nn., 
D. Sharp, 1. c., Japan. 
Protinus egregius, L. Redtenbacher, Fauna Austriaca, Col., edn. 3, 
p. 650, Austria; P. crassicornis, Sharp, 1. c. p. 100, Japan ; P. longicollisj 
P. V. Gredler, C. H. xii. p. 62, S. Tyrol : spp. nn. 
Phloeocharides. 
Pseudopsis sulcata, Newm., in Algiers and France ; Gandolphe, Bull. 
Soc. Ent. Fr. (5) iv. pp. cxlix. & cxl. The supposed representatives of 
this species in Canada and Venezuela are P. columhica, Fauv. ; tom. cit. 
p. clxi. 
Phlceocharis (Scotodytes) laticollis, sp. n., A. Fauvel, Faune Gallo- 
Rhenane, suppl. (ii.) p. 25, Piedmont. 
Piestides. 
2'rygceus, g. n., D. Sharp, 1. c. p. 421. Near Trigonurus (the labrum is 
furnishod with distinct lateral appendages in that genus). 2Vyg. priuceps, 
sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 421, Japan. 
Lispinus longulus, sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 101, Japan. 
Micropep lides . 
Micropeplus fulvus, Er., var. n. japonicus \ id. ibid. Japan. 
Kalissus, g. n., J. L. Leconte, Tr. Am. Ent. Soc. v. p. 50. Head, 
thorax, and abdomen with no elevated lines ; costae of elytra represented 
by two pairs of impressed lines. K. nitidus, sp. n., id. 1. c. p. 51, Van- 
couver Island. 
PSELAPHIDiE. 
Twenty-four species (including 3 new genera) characterized from 
Japan, all (with a few others not in sufficiently good state to describe 
from) taken without special search by Mr. G. Lewis. The occurrence of 
a Tmesiphorus, and the comparative predominance of Batrisi, lead the 
author to consider the Japanese Pselaphidce as presenting a greater re- 
semblance to those of N. America than of Europe ; nothing, however, is 
known of the species occurring in Isf.E. Asia. D. Sharp, Tr. E. Soc. 
1874, pp. lOG-125. 
