280 
ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
Euhulus, g. n., Kirsch, 1. c. p. 200. Distinguished by its linear femora, 
which are not thickened towards the apex, and by the posterior femora being 
longer than the abdomen. Sp. E. {Cryptorhynchus) orthomasticus (Germ.), 
aspericollis, cinctellus, and stipulator (Schou.), E. {Maci'omerus') triangularis 
(Schon.) j E. munitus^ sp. n., Kirsch, /. c. p. 201, Bogotii. 
Conotrachelus amplipmniSf Kirsch, 1. c. p. 193, Bogota. 
Bothrohatys varieyatus, Kirsch, 1. c. p. 100, Bogotil. 
Oasterocercus hypsophilus, Kirsch, 1. c. p. 197, Bogota. 
Onjptorhynchus. Kirsch, 1. c,, describes the following species : — C. biair- 
cuius, p. 201, orhatus, p. 202, cancroma, p. 203, terminatus, p. 204, imbri- 
catus, p. 205, Bogota. 
Ccelostermis amplicollis, Kirsch, 1 . c. p. 205, Bogota. 
Cryphai'is robusta, Dieck, Berl. ent. Zeit. xiii. p. 355, and C. tinyitana, 
Dieck, p. 356, Tangiera. 
Zygopides. 
Copturus scapha, sp. n., Kirsch, 1 . c. p. 206, Bogota. 
Ceuthorhynchides. 
Ruppertsberger (Verb, zool.-bot. Gesells. in Wien, 1869, Sitzungsb. 
6) notes the attacks of the larva of Coeliodos fuliginosus (Marsh.) on roots of 
Papaver somniferum. « 
Riley (First Ann. Rep. nox. Ins. Missouri, 1869, p. 128) figures and de- 
scribes the habits of the Grape Curculio,” Codiodes incequalis (Say), and 
also figures and describes the larva of another Curcidio infesting the grape, 
and of which the imago appears to be undiscovered. 
Ccuthorhynchus arcuatus (Ilbst.) is recorded as British by Rye (Ent. Mo. 
Mag. vi. p. 5), who figures it in frontisp. to Entoin. Annual, 1870, fig. 6. 
Tylden (Ent. Mo. Mag. vi. p. 33) records Cardamine pratensis as the 
food-plant of Ccuthorhynchus suturellus (Gyll.), and gives British localities 
for Poophayus nasturtii (Germ.) and Bhinoncus denticollis (Gyll.). 
IIiSLOP (ibid.) notes Stachys arvensis, one of the Labiatcc, as the food- 
plant of Ccuthorhynchus viduatus (Gyll.). 
Rye (ibid., p. 58) mentions the capture by himself at Folkestone of four 
specimens of Ceuth. marginatus (Payk.) with only six joints to the funiculus. 
These individuals occurred with others of the type form. 
V. Heyden (Berl. ent, Zeit. xiii. p. 59) reproduces Frivaldszky’s descrip- 
tion of Ccuthorhynchus dimidiatus (Abh. d. ungar. Acad. 1865, p. 217, t. xiii. 
fig. 8). 
Peridinetides, 
Peridinetus pictus, sp. n., Kirsch, Berl. ent. Zeit. xiii. p. 297, Bogota. 
Baridiides. 
Riley (First Ann. Rep. nox. Ins. Missouri, 1869, p. 93) figures the prin- 
cipal stages and describes the habits of Baridius trinotatus (Say), which 
infests the stalks of potatoes in the middle States of North America. 
Murray (?} under the initials ‘‘A. M.”) describes in the ‘Gardeners’ 
Chronicle,’ 1869, 1279, under the name Centrinus cpidendri, an apparently 
