90 
AUSTRALIAN SCAEITIU.E. 
Coleopteres,” vol. i. p. 69, pi. 5, fig. 1, under the name of Hyperion 
Sohroteri. As, however, that generic name had been long pre¬ 
viously used by Macleay for another Carabideous genus in the 
“ Annulosa Javanica,” and as Latreille had also previously employed 
the name of Heteroscelis (which was given to it by Dupont and 
Boisduval) for a genus of Cimicidte, I proposed to name it in my 
“ Modern Classification of Insects ” (vol. i. p. 88), 
CAMPYLOCNEMIS SCHROETERI, W., 
in allusion to the singular character of the hind tibiae being curved. 
The figures which have been given of this insect are so rude and 
the trophi so indistinctly represented, that I have thought it would 
add to the interest of this paper to refigure it with details from a 
fine specimen, now, I believe, in the collection of Mr. Norris. Its 
form is very interesting, being most nearly related to Morio of 
all the hitherto described Scaritideous genera; from this genus, 
however, it differs in the smaller-sized mentum, and in the much 
more strongly toothed mandibles. We, however, find in Morio 
traces of the structure of the apex of the anterior tibiae repre¬ 
sented in figure 4. Catadromus, which also occurs in New Holland, 
seems also more nearly allied to it than Stomis and Poecilus, 
between which it was arranged by Laporte in his “ Etudes 
Entomologiques.” 
The Australian plants represented in Plates 21, 22, and 23, 
are Bossisea rufa, Dipodium punctatum (one of the Orchidacese) 
and Chorizema cordatum ; the last species having been recently 
imported from Swan River. 
