1S68.J 203 
Several specimens are in Mr. Walker's collection. Rosomblos a Loxotropa or 
an Entornacis, but belongs undoubtedly to this genus. 
aa. Mesonotum not bisulcate at the base. 
5. — Spilomicrus integer, Thorns., Ofv., 1858, p. 369. 
Black, shining ; legs with the coxae testaceous ; club of the antenna) sub-5- 
articulate, the 8th joint broader than the preceding ; wings very slightly 
infumated. $ . 
(? . Antennas longer than the thorax, 4th joint almost twice as long as the 2nd. 
The $ is distinguished from fiavipes, Thorns., by the antennas, which have the 
9th joint conspicuously narrower than the 10th, the 8th transverse, broader than 
the 7th. 
Not uncommon in England. In Mr. Walker's collection and my own. 
{To be concluded in our next.) 
Description of anew species ofBryinus, Latr. — While entomologizing last June on 
the barren and sunburnt slopes of the Spanish Pyrenees, near the village of Torla, 
I took, running on the ground, what seemed a large Gonatopus, but differing from 
others that I have met with in having wings, and in the length of its antennae. 
Subsequent examination, with the aid of various books, convinces me that I have 
here an undescribed species of the real Bryinus, Latr., not to be confounded with 
Dryinus, Noes. (Hon. 2, 370), or Bryinus, Walk. (Ent. Mag., 4, 413). As the 
present condition of Lati'eille's genus is very unsatisfactory, owing to the extreme 
rarity of types, and its confusion with other allied forms, and with Methoca and 
Tengyrd, I have thought it worth while to bring forward and describe the present 
insect. Latreille himself admitted that hia genus was founded upon a single 
mutilated specimen, and it is far fi-om clear that the individuals subsequently used 
by him in connecting the diagnosis were identical with the first, or even that they 
were anything more than Gonatopus, Ljungh. 
Dryinus, Latr., Gen. Cr. et Ins., iv, p. 40. 
Partium statura eadem fere ut in Gonatopide, sed antennarum art. primus arcu- 
atus, Stius longissimus, sequentibus 3 bussimul sumptis sequalis; 4-5 elongati 
lineares, 4tus 5to sesqui longior ; 6-9 Bubaequales, paulo incrassati, ultimus 
prfficedente longior, acuminatus. Prothorax Gonatopidis ; mesothorax optime 
determinatus, elevatns ; ecutellum sat conspicuum, sutura basali transverse 
impressum. Metathorax elongatus, convexus, supra planiusculus, non-nisi apice 
declivis. Alse angustgo, abdomine breviores ; nervns subcostalis stigma attingens ; 
nei'vus basalis in discum declivis ramulo occurrit norvi humeralis ex apice orto, et 
paulo etiam ultra in discum excurrit. Stigma elongatum, lineare, apice incras- 
satum. Nervus radiaUs incurvus, incompletus, sed nervo spurio a3gre cernendo 
continuatus, cellulam cultriformem, alee apicem fere attingentem claudit ; ramulum 
etiam retrorsum sub stigmate rejicit, quo cellula cubitalis unica quasi innuitur. 
Abdomen, pedes, castera omnes, eadem quae in Gonatopide. 
