mSSBm UC-NRLF B 3 371 53b THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID GEODEPHAGA BRITANNICA GEODEPHAGA BRITANNICA. A MONOGRAPH OF THE CARNIVOROUS GROUND-BEETLES INDIGENOUS TO THE BRITISH ISLES. BY JOHN FREDERIC DAWSON, LL.B. LONDON: JOHN VAN VOORST, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1854. PRINTED BY TAYLOK AND FBANCIS, BED LION COURT, FLEET STREET. PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. IN consequence of a suggestion made to me by several of my entomological friends and correspondents, I have been induced to undertake, and at length to publish, a specific arrangement of the Carnivorous Ground-Beetles indigenous to the British Isles, a group to which I have paid much attention. No small amount of confusion appears to have existed in their nomenclature, which has arisen from the circumstance of an undue importance having been assigned to varieties, differing merely in size and colour, which have either been formed into imaginary species, or have been mistaken for others which have never been found in Britain, the result of which has been that the total amount of actual species has been considerably overrated. In order, if possible, to place their nomenclature and synonymy on a more satisfactory footing, I applied myself to a careful examination and comparison of the various- species contained in all the public and private collections to which I could gain access, especially in those of Messrs. Curtis and Stephens, those of the British Museum, of the Linnsean Society, and the Kirbian collections of the Entomological Society, by which means I have been enabled to arrive at a tolerably correct estimate of their actual value in point of numbers. Some of my more distant corre- spondents have likewise sent me their entire collections of Carabi- deous insects for examination, among which I may mention the late Rev. Mr. Rudd's specimens in the Museum of the York Philoso- phical Institution. The original examples on which Mr. Waterhouse founded the details of his Monograph on the British Notiophili, M368582 VI PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. which was published some years ago in the Entomological Magazine, I have likewise had an opportunity of examining, and have the satisfaction of being able to state on his authority, that the opinion which he at that time entertained with regard to their supposed specific differences has since become materially modified, and does not now differ in any important particular from those which I have advanced respecting them. I have been enabled, moreover, through the attention of others, and especially through the facilities kindly afforded by M. Javet in his periodical visits to this country, to compare with conti- nental types several of our more obscure and doubtful forms, all which has tended materially to facilitate my object. To my obliging correspondent, M. Jacquelin-Duval, I am particularly indebted for the careful consideration which he bestowed on my collection of indigenous Bembidia, types of which he had in his possession during the period in which he was engaged in preparing his Monograph ' De Bembidiis Europseis ' ; and which were returned to me accompanied by much useful information. Some important notes on a portion of the Carabida contained in Mr. Stephen s's cabinet were made by Dr. Schaum, during his first visit to England in 1846, which were communicated to me at that time and subsequently published in the Stettin Transac- tions, of which a translation appeared more recently in the ' Annals and Magazine of Natural History ' : to the general accuracy of those notes I am enabled to bear testimony ; and to the kindness with which Mr. Stephens afforded me every facility at all times for making myself thoroughly acquainted with the contents of his cabinet, I have been indebted for the means of identifying the species and correcting their arrangement*. I have been unwilling to reject any reputed indigenous species which I felt that I could reasonably retain, and yet, after full consideration, have been compelled to reduce their aggregate amount very considerably, either because many of them are evidently varieties of others, or because no sufficiently conclusive evidence exists to warrant their retention in the British Fauna. In the subfamily Bembidides, particularly, I have been compelled to reject about two-fifths as mere varieties or immature examples, * Since Mr. Stephens's death his collections have become the property of the nation, and are now in the British Museum. PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. Vll which may satisfactorily be resolved into some one or other of the remainder. Equally unwilling have I been to record any as novel, until I had failed to procure its recognition. Of the several species described in this work as new, all have been sub- mitted to the opinion of continental entomologists, with one or two exceptions, and returned as unknown; and whether the latter may ultimately prove to have been undescribed or not, I have thought it better to introduce them as species which are undoubtedly indigenous, than to pass them over without notice. As an additional aid in determining the differences between certain closely allied species, some outlines are added represent- ing those external parts of the insects in which the most material distinctions of character are to be found, which, as well as the dissections, and the entire figures of newly introduced species, have been carefully delineated by Mr. Westwood from typical examples. I have confined my citations to a few only of the principal authorities, in preference to extending them, as I conceived un- necessarily, beyond the limits of what was requisite to identify the species. The references given to Mr. Stephens' s works of those reputed British Carabida, of which no indigenous examples exist in any collection (and of which the supposed representatives contained in his cabinet must unquestionably be referred to other species), are to be considered as applicable to those supposed representa- tives, and not to the actual species of the authors, whose names he has assigned to them, except where it is otherwise stated : but this remark does not apply to those veritable species of continental authors, which are correctly designated by Mr. Ste- phens as British, because in some instances the descriptions given by our English author apply to the actual species whose names he has affixed to those descriptions, rather than to their supposed representatives contained in his collection. The reputed British species, above alluded to, will be found noticed under the respective heads to which they really belong, and need not here be enumerated : but besides these, there are a few others (not to mention such exotic insects whose claim to admission into the British Fauna has long been abandoned) which are not noticed in the body of this work, and of which no sufficiently Vlll PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. authenticated examples exist in any collection, which may as well be here disposed of. Lebia ephippium, Steph. Manual, App. p. 433. Doubtless imported. Carabus agrestis, Creutz., et Lippii, Dahl. Said to have been found in Lincolnshire. Nebria picicornis, Fab. Stated to have been captured by the Rev. F. W. Hope in Longmont Forest. Its natural habitat is on the muddy banks of rivers and lakes, and the locality in which it is reputed to have been found is so widely different from those which it naturally affects, that I am inclined to suspect it has been introduced into the British Fauna by mistake. Helobia impressa, Newm. I have not seen this insect ; it pro- bably belongs to Nebria nivalis. Licinus cassideus, Fab. Not indigenous ; a specimen is reputed to have been found at Aldborough. Epomis circumscriptus, Dufts. Not British ; it is represented in the Stephensian cabinet by two Chlcenii from the Cape, as stated by Dr. Schaum in the ' Stettin Transactions.' Sogines punctulatus, 111. Cophosus elongatus, Sam. Pterostichus fasciopunctatus, Fab. Panzeri, Meg. Cheporus metallicus, Fab. Agonum Bogemanni, Gyll. Amara municipalis, Dufts. Zabrus obesus, Latr. Pangus Scaritides, Sturm. Peryphus Fellmanni, Gyll. Lopha nana, Steph. No example exists in any British Collection to represent the above species. Although the present work has been undertaken merely with the view of furnishing a descriptive arrangement of the species of Geodephagous insects indigenous to the British Isles, yet it will be proper to offer some remarks on the Generic arrangement which I have employed, inasmuch as it differs from that which is ordinarily received by English entomologists. It is evident that the principle upon which the Brachinida, Scaritida, Harpalidte, and Bembididte have been erected into distinct families, and placed upon a footing of equal importance PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. IX with the Cicindelida and Carabida, cannot be maintained, but that the most consistent and natural division will be found in Latreille's two grand families Cicindeletes and Carabici, which arrangement I have accordingly resumed under the terms Cicin- delidce and Carabida, the distinctive characters of which will be found stated ; and I have furthermore divided the latter into five groups or subfamilies, according to the plan set forth by Mr. Westwood in his ' Introduction to the Modern Classification of Insects/ with this difference however, that I have transposed the third and fourth groups, considering it more desirable that the Harpalides should immediately precede the Bembidides ; and the natural transition from Trechus to Bembidium be maintained through the intimate affinities which subsist between those remarkable insects Aepys* marinus, Blemus areolatus, Lymnceum nigropiceum, and Cillenus lateralis ; and I have placed Pelophila and the Elaphridea in their natural juxtaposition with Nebria, though by so doing, the foreign genus Homophron is further removed from the Hydrocantharides, to which at first view, and judging merely from its external structure, it would seem to be more nearly allied than it really is : in this arrangement I have consequently followed, under certain modifications, Dejean, Erichson, Heer, Redtenbacher, and in fact most of the continental entomologists. The first group (Brachinides) comprises all the genera which were comprehended in the family Brachinidte of MacLeay and Stephens; and corresponds with Dejean' s subfamily Truncati- pennes, or Ground-Beetles with the apex of their elytra truncate and not quite covering the abdomen ; these also have the anterior tibiae notched within before the apex and the anterior tarsi in the thorace rufo-testaceo, elytris obsolete striatis, pallidis, sutura infuscata ; antennis pedibusque pallidis. Dej. Spec. 2. 450; Icon. 1. 106. pi. 11. — Babington, Ent. Trans. 1.88.— Steph. Mand. 5. 367, et Manual, p. 7. — Erichson, Kafer, 29. Linear-elongate. Head pitchy black and elongate, narrowed before and behind, and obsoletely punctured throughout, having an oblong fovea between the eyes ; the latter large, but not pro- minent ; mouth, palpi and antennse testaceous. Thorax widest in front, longer than broad, the anterior angles rounded, sides narrowed behind and the margins elevated, especially at the posterior angles which are obtuse, the colour testaceous red, the dorsal line interrupted before it reaches the base, and the disk otherwise marked with a few faint transverse wrinkles; scutellum large and long, with its sides waved. Elytra narrowed and 8 CARABID^E. DROMIUS. rounded at the shoulders, widest behind the middle, sides almost linear, much elongated, obsoletely striated, pale testaceous, with the suture fuscous, the obscure colour gradually widening towards the apex till it joins a large and often roundish spot of the same colour just before the extremity ; legs pale testaceous. Length 2| lines. This rare species may readily be recognized by its very elon- gate form and its oblong head. It was first captured in this country at Madingley Wood, near Cambridge, in 1831, and has been occasionally found since in the sedge-boats on the river Cam. In July 1847 I secured three specimens, and in Sep- tember 1850 a fourth among herbage in Holme Fen, not far from Whittlesea Mere. 2. D. linearis : elongatus, rufo-testaceus ; elytris punctato-stri- atis, apice infuscatis; antennis pedibusque pallidis. Carabus linearis, Oliv. Ent. 3. 35. 111. Lebia linearis, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 187. Dromius linearis, Dej. Spec. 1. 233; Icon. 1. 107. pi. 11. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 42.— Steph. Mand. 1. 25, et Manual, p. 7.— Erichson, Kafer, 28.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 9. Linear-elongate, narrow, testaceous red. Head large, smooth behind, longitudinally strigose in front, dusky, sometimes black ; eyes black ; mouth, palpi and antenna? testaceous. Thorax cordate, narrowed behind, moderately convex, with a fine dorsal furrow, and a fovea near each hinder angle. Elytra elongate, shoulders rounded, sides linear, punctate-striated, apex obscure ; legs pale testaceous. Length 2£ lines. Very common. 3. D. agilis : oblongus ; capite thoraceque ferrugineis ; elytris fuscis, subtiliter striatis, seriebus duabus punctorum impres- sorum ; antennis pedibusque pallidis. Carabus agilis, Fab. Mant. 1. 204 (1787); S. El. 1. 185.— Payk. Mon. 102 (1790). Lebia agilis, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 184.— Dufts. Faun. 2. 251. Dromius agilis, Dej. Spec. 1. 240; Icon. 1. 118. pi. 12.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 36.— Steph. Mand. 1. 21, et Manual, p. 6. — Erichson, Kafer, 30.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 11. D. meridionalis, Dej. Spec. 1. 242. — Steph. Mand. 1. 16, et Manual, p. 6. Var. /3. elytris maculd pallidd ornatis. Carabus fenestratus, Fab. S. El. 1. 209.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 168.— Steph. Mand. 5. 367, et Manual, p. 7. C. ayilis, var. n, Heer, Faun. Helv. 11. CARABID^E. DROMIUS. 9 Oblong, rather depressed. Head pitchy brown, wide, with a deep fovea on each side between the antennae ; eyes large, globose and black, palpi and antennae pale testaceous. Thorax ferrugi- nous, subquadrate, rounded in front below the anterior angles, narrowed behind, margins reflexed, base truncate, hinder angles somewhat rotundate, base with a more or less distinct fovea on each side. Elytra fuscous or pitchy, sometimes with a pale oblong patch on each rather before the middle, sometimes wholly testaceous in less mature examples, much wider than the thorax, shoulders rounded, sides rather widest behind the middle, apex as usual truncate, disk rather depressed, obsoletely striated, with a series of impressions between the second and third, and another between the seventh and eighth striae ; body beneath testaceous red, legs pale. Length 2f lines. This species is rather variable in colour, and occasionally in some slight degree in form, the thorax being more quadrate in some examples, and the sides less rounded in front, than in others, which variations have led to the supposition that they are distinct species. I have examined carefully the insects recorded by Mr. Stephens under the names meridionalis and fenestratus, and they appear to be simply varieties of this species, whose claim to distinction rests upon an eccentricity of colour, but upon no constant or very material difference in form or sculpture. Dr. Schaum considers D. fenestratus of Stephens' s Collection a variety of testaceus, Erichson, with a yellow dash on the anterior part of the elytra; it is described by Dejean as agilis, var. a, and I believe correctly, for the several examples received from abroad of testaceus , Erichson, do not, upon a close examination, present differences of sufficient importance to warrant their separation. Whether, as Dr. Schaum supposes (Stettin Ent. Zeit.), D. fenestratus, Stephens, differs from C. fenestratus. Fab., or whether it be perfectly identical with it, the latter itself is now generally accepted as a variety also of D. agilis. This species is generally distributed, and is in many parts of the kingdom abundant, under the bark of trees and among the damp herbage of hedge-banks. 4. D. quadrimaculatus : oblongus ; capite nigro, thorace rufo, subquadrato, angulis rotundatis ; elytris substriatis, fuscis, maculis duabus antennis pedibusque pattidis. Carabus quadrimaculatus, Linn. F. S. 813.— Fab. S. El. 1. 207. Lebia quadrimaculata, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 186. — Dufts. Faun. 2. 250. 10 CARABID^E. DKOMIUS. Dromius quadrimaculatus, Dej. Spec. 1. 239; Icon. 1. 115. pi. 12.— -Sturm, D. F. 7. 33.— Steph. Mand. 1.21, et Manual, p. 7.— Erichson, Kafer, 30.— Heer, Faun. Hehr. 10. In form like the preceding, but smaller. Head black, round- ish, strigose, having a fovea on each side between the antennae, the latter with the palpi and mouth pale testaceous. Thorax ferruginous red, rather shorter than in agilis, much wrinkled transversely on each side the dorsal furrow, base with a fovea near each hinder angle, the latter a little rounded, and the margins elevated. Elytra fuscous black, with an oblong testa- ceous spot before the middle, and a shorter one of the same colour at the apex, and usually entirely covering it, the disk very distinctly striated, the striae obsoletely punctured, the sixth with a series of deeper impressions ; thorax and breast beneath ferru- ginous ; abdomen obscure black ; legs testaceous. Length 2J lines. Widely distributed. 5. D. quadrinotatus : oblongus ; capite nigro, thorace piceo, subelongato, postice attenuate, angulis posticis prominulis ; elytris fuscis, substriatis, maculis duabus antennis pedibus- que pallidis. Carabus quadrinotatus, Panz. Faun. 73. 5. Lebia quadrinotata, Dufts. Faun. 2. 253. Dromius quadrinotatus, Dej. Spec. 1. 238 ; Icon. 1. 114. pi. 12. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 38. — Steph. Mand. 1. 21, et Manual, p. /. — Erichson, Kafer, 31. — Heer, Faun. Aust. 10. Oblong, slightly depressed, black. Head large, smooth, flattish in front with a fovea on each side between the antennae, which together with the palpi and mouth are pale testaceous. Thorax pitchy, slightly elongated, a little rounded below the anterior angles, then obliquely sloped and narrowed to the base, the sides being margined, and the hinder angles elevated and rather prominent, having near each a deep fovea. Elytra oblong, rounded at the shoulders, slightly widest behind the middle, very obsoletely striated, having a large ovate pale testaceous spot at the base and a smaller one before the apex; legs pale testaceous. Length 2 lines. Generally distributed under bark of trees, &c. 6. D. quadrisignatus : oblongus; capite nigro, thorace quadrate, rufo ; elytris substriatis, fuscis, maculis magnis duabus antennis pedibusque pallidis. Dej. Spec. 1. 236; Icon. 1. 111. pi. 11.— Babington, Ent. CARABID.E. DROMIUS. 11 Trans. 1. 10. 2. — Steph. Mand. 5. 367, et Manual, p. 7. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 10. Head obscurely black, smooth, slightly convex, with the fore- part, mouth, palpi and antennae testaceous. Thorax quadrate, anterior angles rounded, sides narrowed towards the posterior angles which are obtuse, the surface entirely ferruginous red, with the centre sometimes pitchy. Elytra with the humeral angles slightly rounded, the sides somewhat straight, faintly striated, fuscous, with two testaceous spots on each, a large denticulated one in front and a smaller one at the apex ; abdomen pitchy, legs pale testaceous. Length 2 lines. This species is nearly allied to the preceding, but may be distinguished by the following characters. The head is shorter and more convex, the forehead not depressed, but with merely a slight impression on each side, not deeply foveated, nor distinctly striated, as in the allied species ; the antennae are shorter and stouter; the thorax is broader and entirely rufous; the elytra are wider at the base, with the shoulders less rounded, and their pattern is more varied, the anterior spots being angular and denticulated instead of ovate, and the abdomen is pitchy. It appears to be a scarce species, but has been taken in Madingley Wood, and elsewhere near Cambridge; at Colney Hatch and Wimbledon Park; and near Weston-on-the-Green, Oxon. 7. D. sigma: testaceus; capite nigro, thorace subquadrato, elytris substriatis, suturd fasciaque postica dentata/wsczs. Carabus siffma, Rossi, Faun. Etr. 1. 226 (1790). Dromius siffma, Dej. Spec. 1. 235; Icon. 1. 110. pi. 11. — Erichson, Kafer, 32. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 9. Carabus fasciatus, Payk. Mon. 97 (1790).— Fab. Ent. S. 1. 133 (1792-8).— Fab. S. El. 1. 186. Dromius bipennifer, Babington, Ent. Trans. 1. 86. 9. — Steph. Manual, p. 7. Oblong, depressed. Head black, round and flattish, with a small fovea on each side between the eyes ; palpi and antennae testaceous yellow. Thorax red, subquadrate, anterior angles rounded, sides narrowed behind, with their margins elevated, and a slight impression on each side at the base close to the posterior angles, the dorsal furrow very distinct. Elytra testa- ceous, with a brown transverse toothed fascia behind the middle, leaving a pale spot at the apex, the disk more or less indistinctly punctate- striated ; abdomen rufescent and margined with fuscous; legs pale testaceous. Length 1| line. There are several varieties of this insect which present a slight CARABID^E. DROMIUS. difference in the pattern of the elytra, among them one which occurs locally in the Isle of Wight. It has a pale spot on the shoulders, extending not more than half so far downwards as in the insect figured by Dej can, and the transverse band is much broader and darker, leaving merely two minute dots (sometimes united) at the apex. The pattern in these again also varies more or less, as well as in the Cambridgeshire insects. This species, the D. bipennifer of the British Collections, is abundant near Whittlesea Mere and in the Cambridgeshire fens, and is found also near Dorking, Carlisle, and in North Wales. 8. D. fasciatus : subelongatus, testaceus ; capite nigro ; thorace quadrato ferrugineo ; elytris substriatis basi pallidis postice fuscis, macula antennis pedibusque pallidis. Lebia fasciata, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 4. 459. Dromius fasciatus, Dej. Spec. 1. 238 ; Icon. 1. 113. pi. 12. — Steph. Mand. 1. 24, et Manual, p. 7. — Erichson, Kafer, 31. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 10. Rather elongate, depressed. Head black, wide, appearing finely coriaceous under a magnifying glass, having a faint stria on each side in front ; antennae and palpi testaceous, apex of the latter pitchy. Thorax rusty brown, with the margins and hinder angles pale testaceous, quadrate, anterior angles rounded, sides slightly narrowed behind and again slightly produced before the posterior angles, which are a little elevated but obtuse, the base with an impressed fovea on each side. Elytra oblong, rusty brown with a pale testaceous patch covering the shoulders and extending nearly half way downwards, not touching the suture, and also a small round or ovate spot of the same livid colour near the tip ; in some examples the spots are more or less in- distinct or nearly obliterated, in others they run into one another ; body beneath fuscous black ; legs pale testaceous. Length 1| line. Widely distributed, but local and found chiefly in sandy situations, in damp ditches and hedge-banks. Abundant at Deal, in Cambridgeshire, Devon, at JBerwick-upon-Tweed ; " on the sea-coast at Bamborough, Beadnell and Embleton, in June/' J. Hardy, and in Ireland. 9. D. melanocephalus : testaceus ; capite nigro, elytris sub- striatis, antennis Dej. Spec. 1. 234 ; Icon. 1. 109. pi. 11.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 44.— Steph. Mand. 1. 22, et Manual, p. 7.— Erichson, Kafer, 32.— Heer, Faun. Hclv. 9. In form like the preceding, but shorter and very much smaller. CARABID^l. — DROMIUS. 13 Head black and shining ; palpi and antennae pale testaceous. Thorax testaceous red, subquadrate, the length rather less than the breadth, a little narrowed at the base, the posterior angles slightly elevated and nearly rectangular. Elytra livid testaceous, and usually transparent so as to show the wings distinctly be- neath, a little widest behind, obsoletely striated, especially at the sides; underside of the body dusky ferruginous; legs pale. Length 1| line. Generally distributed. 10. D. glabratus : oblongus, nigro-subceneus ; thorace subqua- drato, postice angustato, glabrato ; elytris sublsevibus. Lebia glabrata, Dufts. Faun. 2. 248. Dromius glabratus, Dej. Spec. 1. 244 ; Icon. 1. 121. pi. 13.-^- Steph. Mand. 1 . 25, et Manual, p. 8. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 11. Carabus femoralis, Marsham, Ent. 463. Dromius femoralis, Steph. Mand. 1. 25, et Manual, p. 8. D. angustatus, (Curtis) Steph. Manual, p. 8. D. maurus, Steph. Mand. 1. 1/6, et Manual, p. 8. Deep glossy or bronzed black. Head round, smooth and convex. Thorax subquadrate, narrowed behind, the sides and base considerably rounded, with the posterior angles nearly ob- solete, the central line very fine and the disk glabrous. Elytra oblong, depressed, with the humeral angles rather prominent, the disk glabrous, with a few rudiments only of striae; legs occasionally pitchy. Length 1^ line. C. femoralis, Marsham, is an immature representative of this species, from which D. angustatus and maurus cannot be separated. Very common. 11. D. tmncatellus : nigro-sub&neus ; thorace brevi subcordato, postice rotundato; elytris substriatis; antennis basi tibiisgue piceis. Carabus truncatellus, Linn. S. N. 2. 673. — Fab. S. El. 1. 210. Lebia truncatella, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 182. — Dufts. Faun. 2. 247. Dromius truncatellus, Dej. Spec. 1.248 ; Icon. 1. 127.pl. 13. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 51.— Steph. Mand. 1. 26, et Manual, p. 8.— Erichson, Kafer, 33. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 11. In form like D. foveolus, but rather shorter and smaller, with- out any brassy tinge and without any foveae on the elytra. Head and eyes smaller. Thorax shorter, subcordate, with the sides regularly rounded behind, posterior angles very obtuse. Elytra shorter than in foveolus and slightly wider, the humeral angles rounded, apex wide and truncate, disk very obsoletely striated; 14 CARABIDJE. DROMIUS. body beneath black ; antennae and legs black or slightly pitchy. Length 1^ line. This insect is larger than the preceding and much broader, but not quite so large as the next species ; it cannot be confounded with either, it is more pitchy black, and has the sides of the elytra very distinctly rounded, and is both shorter and wider than either of the allied species : from foveolus (with which it associates as well as with glabratus) it may instantly be distinguished also by the absence of the small punctures, and the brassy brown colour so conspicuous in that insect. This species has, together with the two following, been erected into a separate genus (Metabletus] by Dr. Schmidt. It is far from uncommon, though certainly local. I have taken it at Redhill, Surrey, on the common near the Railway Station ; and in Pegwell Bay near Ramsgate, on a grassy bank on the edge of the shore, early in the spring. " Found in sandy and gravelly situations beneath stones near London," Mr. Stephens. It is also included among the Irish species by Mr. Haliday. 12. D. foveolus : obscure ceneus ; elytris substriatis} punctis duobus impressis. Lebia foveola, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 183. Dromius foveolus, Steph. Mand. 1. 26, et Manual, p. 8. — Erichson, Kafer, 33. Lebia punctatella, Dufts. Faun. 2. 248. Dromius punctatellus, Dej. Spec. 1. 247; Icon. 1. 126.pl. 13. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 52.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 11. Above obscure brassy brown. Head smooth, with an obsolete fovea on each side between the antenna? which are pitchy black, eyes large. Thorax short, broad, narrowed behind as in the preceding species, and the posterior angles obtuse and elevated, but with the base sloped upwards to meet them, the dorsal line very distinct, but the basal fovese almost obsolete. Elytra rounded at the shoulders, and rather so on the sides, moderately convex, obsoletely punctate-striated, with two deep impressions on the third stria ; legs black, slightly pitchy. Length 1^ line. This insect occurs in profusion almost everywhere in sandy and gravelly places. " Portmarnock sands " in Ireland, A. H. Haliday, Esq. _\ 13. D. obscuroguttatus : piceo-subseneus ; elytris substriatis, maculis duabus alterd humerali alterd apicali antennarum basi tibiisque rufescentibus. Lebia obscuro-guttata, Dufts. Faun. 2. 249. CARABID.E. DROMIUS. 15 Dromius obscuroguttatus, Erichson, Kafer, 32. D. spilotus, Dej. Spec. 1. 246 ; Icon. 1. 124. pi. 13.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 47.— Curtis, Ent. pi. 231.— Steph. Manual, p. 7. D. impunctatus, Steph. Mand. 1. 23. In form like the two preceding species, but pitchy black with a faint brassy tinge. Head convex, smooth, with a very obsolete stria on each side in front, and the whole surface, when examined under a magnifying glass, finely coriaceous. Thorax as in foveolus, but rather narrower (PL I. f. 1). Elytra broad with the shoulders rounded and slightly prominent, apex obliquely truncate, disk very obsoletely striated, with a series of deep im- pressions on the exterior margins, pitchy or fuscous black, with a pale more or less distinct spot on the shoulders and another (often obliterated) near the apex ; thighs pitchy, tibiae and tarsi paler. Length 1| line. This species is rather scarce. The localities given by Mr. Stephens are Norfolk, Berkshire, and near London. I once met with it in profusion near Sandown, Isle of Wight (April 1846), and have found it also at Gravesend and in Hurst Wood, near Tunbridge Wells. 14. D. quadrillum : nigro-sub(eneus ; thorace lateribus rotun- dato postice fortiter coarctato, angulis posticis acutis; elytris striatis, inter stitiis punctatis, maculis duabuspallidis. Lebia quadrillum, Dufts. Faun. 2. 246. Dromius quadrillum, Dej. Spec. 1. 249 ; Icon. 1. 127. pi. 13. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 45.— Steph. Mand. 1. 23, et Manual, p. 8. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 12. Lionychus quadrillum, Redt. Faun. Aust. 76. Var. (3. elytris singulis unimaculatis. Dromius bipunctatus, Heer, Faun. Helv. 12. Above bronzed black, rather larger and wider than the pre- ceding species. Head round, wide, obliquely impressed on each side between the antennse, two joints at the base of the latter red. Thorax broad in front and short, rounded at the sides below the anterior angles, but suddenly and considerably contracted behind, the base also being rounded as in the preceding species, and sloped upwards to meet the posterior angles which are very minute, acute and prominent (PL I. f. 2), disk with a fine dorsal line and a transverse impression in front thereof, and the base striated longitudinally. Elytra broad, short, humeral angles rounded and rather elevated, sides dilated behind, the surface finely but evidently striated, and the interstices minutely punc- tured, having two yellowish white spots on each elytron, one at the basal angle and another a little behind the middle, the 16 CARABIDvE. LEBIA. latter of which is sometimes wanting; body beneath and the legs black. Length 1^ line. To receive this species a new genus (Lionychus) has been created by Dr. Wissmann (Stettin Ent. Zeit. 7. 25). The Stettin Catalogue (1852) records this insect as Carabus 4-pustu- latus of Fabricius, but as that author's description and refer- ences are unsatisfactory, I have retained the generally re- ceived name. The species is apparently scarce. Mr. Stephens informs us that it has been taken near London and at Southend. Mr. Wollaston captured a pair near Bridport, Dorset, and a fine series at Slapton Ley, Devon, in May 1852 : these belong to the variety with the humeral spots alone visible. During the month of May in the year 1853, my friends Mr. Wollaston and the Rev. H. Clark, as well as myself, found it in plenty among the fine shingle at the base of the low cliffs eastward of Southend. Among the individuals captured by us, every variety is included. Genus 5. LEBIA, Latreille. Mentum dente medio nullo. Ligula apice rotundata ; paraglossis coriaceis, ei sub&qualibus, apice singulatim rotundatis. Palpi articulo ultimo subovafoj apice truncato. Tarsi articulo quarto emarginato ; unguiculis pectinatis. When Bonelli separated the genera Demetrias and Dromius from Lebia proper, he also divided the latter into Lamprias and Lebia. He took L. cyanocephala as the type to represent the characters of the former, which he stated to consist in the penul- timate joint of the tarsi being simple, the antennae linear, and the last joint of the palpi truncate; — and as the type of the latter he took L. crux-minor, having the penultimate joint of the tarsi bifid, the antennae more slender at the base, and the last joint of the palpi less truncate. Upon a close examination, however, of the different species of Lebia, it did not appear that these characters held good ; for even in L. cyanocephala, the type of the genus Lamprias, the penultimate joint of the tarsi is not simple, but bifid ; neither is it simple in any of the others, though in some it is difficult to decide whether it is bifid or bi- lobed; and as the two remaining characters assigned by Bonelli appeared altogether too vague to warrant the creation of a new genus, M. Dejean once more reunited the Lamprias and Lebia of Bonelli under the original name Lebia*, an arrangement which has now been adopted generally by the continental ento- mologists. * Dejean, Iconographie, vol. i. p. 132. CARABID^E. LEBIA. 17 1. L. crux minor : nigra ; thorace antennarum basi pedibusque rufis j elytris testaceis cruce nigrd. Carabus crux minor, Linn. S. N. 2. 673. Lebia crux minor, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 181. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 24. —Dej. Spec. 1. 261 ; Icon. 1. 139. pi. 15.— Steph. Mand. 1. 27, et Manual, p. 8.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 13. Head black, coarsely punctured; palpi black; antennae fuscous, with three joints at the base red. Thorax ferruginous red, finely punctured, with a slight central longitudinal line and wrinkled transversely; scutellum black. Elytra broad, shoulders rounded and prominent, sides widest behind the middle, finely punctate-striated, with two minute dots on the third stria from the suture, testaceous red, with a triangular black patch surround- ing the scutellum, the black colour passing all down the suture to the apex, and being crossed behind the middle by a broad transverse waved band of the same colour dilated at the sides and next the suture, leaving a round immaculate spot at the apex : underside of the body black, except the thorax, which, together with the Iegs5 is red. Length 3 lines. The instances recorded of the capture of this rare species in Britain are very few. Coombe Wood, Windsor, Plumstead Common, Bristol, Lymington, and Netley have produced each a solitary example. More recently, Mr, Stephens secured one in Unsted Wood, near Godalming (Aug. 27, 1842), and Mr. Wol- laston brushed one into his net from a damp meadow at Trene- glos, in Cornwall, on llth September, 1844. Two specimens were taken in a sandy lane near Tunbridge Wells by Major Stanhope Taylor, one of which he kindly presented to me. " Beaten off a sallow near Lugs, south end of Loch Lomond, by Mr. R. Logan." Murray's Catalogue. 2. L. turcica : nigra, thorace rufo ; elytris striatis, nigris, macula magnd humerali pedibusque testaceis. Carabus turcicus, Fab. S. El. 1. 203. Lebia turcica, Dej. Spec. 1. 263 ; Icon. 1. 142. pi. 15. — Curtis, Ent. pi. 87. — Steph. Mand. 1 . 27, et Manual, p. 8. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 13. Rather smaller than crux minor. Head black, punctured behind, and wrinkled in front between the eyes ; mouth, palpi and antennse red. Thorax red, with a deep central longitudinal line, bordered by numerous transverse wrinkles ; scutellum red. Elytra black, with a large testaceous red patch on the shoulders, and a very slender margin of the same colour extend- ing to the apex, deeply striated, the striae sparingly punctured, 18 CARABID^E. LEBIA. the third from the suture with two impressed dots ; breast ferruginous ; abdomen black, with a pale spot in the centre ; legs pale testaceous. Length 2± lines. The claim of this rare species to be inserted in the British fauna rests upon four specimens, reported to have been captured in Oakhampton Park, and presented to the British Museum by Dr. Leach. Mr. Stephens, however, calls our attention to the fact that Fabricius quoted this insect as British from a specimen in the collection of Dr. Hunter. 3. L. haemorrhoidalis : rufa, elytris nigris, apice rufis. Carabus hamorrhoidalis, Fab. S. El. 1. 203.— Pariz. Faun. 75. Lebia hcemorrhoidalis, Dej. Spec. 1. 266 ; Icon. 1. 145. pi. 15. — Steph.Mand. 1.28,et Manual, p.8.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 13. This species is about two-thirds the stature of L. crux minor and is entirely red, with the exception of the elytra, which are shining blue-black, with their apex red. Head and thorax finely punctured; the latter short, much dilated and rounded at the sides, the central line bordered by numerous fine transverse wrinkles. Elytra with the shoulders rounded and prominent, sides dilated behind the middle, apex obliquely truncate, faintly striate-punctate, with two impressed dots on the third stria from the suture. Length 2 lines. The claim of this elegant little species to be admitted into our indigenous fauna rests upon a single example, which Mr. Ste- phens reports to have been captured near Netley, Shropshire, on broom, by the Rev. F. W. Hope. (LAMPRIAS, Bonelli.} 4. L. cyanocephala : cyanea vel viridis, thorace pedibusque rufis, femoribus apice cseruleo-nigris, elytris punctato-stri- atis, interstitiis punctatis. Carabus cyanocephalus, Linn. F. S. 794. — Fab. S. El. 1. 200. Lebia cyanocephala, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 179. — Dej. Spec. 1. 256; Icon. 1. 134. pi. 14.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 21.— Erichson, Kafer, 34.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 12. Lamprias cyanocephalus, Steph. Mand. 1. 29, et Manual, p. 8. L. nigrit arsis, Steph. Mand. 1. 29, et Manual, p. 9. Bright green or cyaneous, very brilliant and shining, with the thorax ferruginous red. Head thickly punctured, and with an obsolete fovea on each side between the eyes ; mouth pitchy ; palpi and antennae blackish, with the basal joint of the latter CARABID^l. — BRACHINUS. 19 red. Thorax transverse, short, widest in front, sides rounded, slightly narrowed behind, posterior angles acute, disk rather convex, thickly punctured, with a distinct longitudinal dorsal furrow, and a deeply impressed transverse line at the base, and an obsolete fovea on each side likewise thickly punctured ; scutellum blue-black. Elytra narrowed and rounded at the shoulders, dilated behind, apex obliquely truncate, finely punctate- striated, interstices more or less punctured ; thorax beneath red, breast and abdomen bluish green, legs red, with the tip of the thighs bluish green, tarsi fuscous black. Length 2^-3^ lines. This species is variable in size, though usually somewhat larger than the next : it differs chiefly in having the tips of the femora, the breast and scutellum bluish black instead of red. It is local, but has been found at Darenth Wood, Ripley, Windsor, &c. It is the L. nigritarsis of Leach. 5. Ii. chlorocephala : cyanea vel viridis ; thorace pedibusque rufis ; elytris punctato-striatis, interstitiis subtiliter punc- tatis. Carabus chlorocephalus, Ent. Heft 2. 117. Lebia chlorocephala, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 180. — Dej, Spec. 1. 257 ; Icon. 1. 136. pi. 14.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 22.— Erichson, Kafer, 34.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 12. Lamprias chlorocephalus , Steph. Mand. 1. 30, et Manual, p. 9. L. rufipes, Steph. Mand. 1. 30, et Manual, p. 9. Brilliant shining green or cyaneous, with the thorax red. Head thickly punctured; palpi black; antennae fuscous black, with the first, second, and basal half of the third joints red. Thorax rather longer, and more narrowed behind than in the preceding species, posterior angles prominent, convex, thickly punctured, with a slight dorsal line, and a transverse impression at the base ; scutellum red. Elytra more finely punctured than in the preceding species ; thorax and breast beneath testaceous red ; abdomen bluish green ; legs red, with the tarsi fuscous black. Length 2^-3 lines. Abundant in many parts of the kingdom on the common broom, and at the roots of the gorse. L. rufipes, Steph., is the same species. Genus 6. BRACHINUS, Weber. Mentum (plerumque] dente medio nullo. Ligula medio anguste cornea, lateribus membranacea ; paraglossis apice subacumi- natis, earn parum superantibus. Palpi articulo ultimo cylin- c2 20 CARABID^E. BRACHINUS. drico, aut subovato, apice truncato. Mandibulse firma, acuta. Labrum brevissimum, angulis anticis rotundatis, apice sub- sinuatum. Tarsi articulo quarto integro ; unguiculis simpli- cibus. 1. B. crepitans : rufo-ferrugineus ; elytris substriatis, nigro- subcyaneis ; antennarum articulo tertio quartoque abdomine- que infuscatis. Carabus crepitans, Linn. S. N. 2. 671. Brachinus crepitans, Fab. S. El. 1 . 219.— Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 1 76. —Dej. Spec. 1.318; Icon. 1. 161.pl. 17— Sturm, D. F. 7.79. — Steph. Mand. 1. 34, et Manual, p. 9. — Erichson, Kafer, 26. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 14. B. immacuHcornis, Steph. Mand. 1. 177, et Manual, p. 9. B. explodens, Steph. Mand. 1. 35, et Manual, p. 9. B. glabratus, Steph. Mand. 1. 36, et Manual, p. 9. Ferruginous red, elytra black, blue-black, steel-blue or green- ish, pubescent. Head oblong, punctured behind, having an oblong rugose fovea on each side in front ; eyes large and black; basal joint of antennje bright red, second, third and fourth joints dusky, the rest dull pale red. Thorax oblong- cordate, narrow, acutely margined, posterior angles slightly pro- minent, disk rugosely punctate, with a fine central stria, and a faint transverse line at the base ; scutellum pitchy red. Elytra oblong-ovate, broad, shoulders rounded, sides dilated behind the middle, apex truncate, very indistinctly striated, interstices finely punctured ; head and thorax beneath red ; breast and abdomen pitchy, finely punctured, and clothed with golden pile ; legs rusty red and pubescent. Length 3-4 lines. This little Bombardier is very abundant in the south of England; it occurs in profusion in the Undercliff, Isle of Wight ; and both in size and colour varies considerably, in the latter respect from dull black to steel-blue. The insects recorded by Mr. Stephens under the names immaculicornis, explodens and glabratus must be referred to this species. The insect is found also in the counties of Wexford and Louth in Ireland. 2. B. sclopeta : ruber ; elytris subl&vibus, cyaneis, suturd ab- breviatd ferrugined. Carabus sclopeta, Fab. S. El. 1. 220. Brachinus sclopeta, Clairv. Ent. Helv. 2.41 .—Dej. Spec. 1 . 322 ; Icon. 1. 167. pi. 18.— Sturm, D. F. 7. 82. — Steph. Mand. 1. 36, et Manual, p. 9. — Curtis, Ent. pi. 554. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 15. Rusty red, elytra cyaneous and pubescent, with the suture CARABIDJE. TARUS. 21 ferruginous red from the base to about two-thirds its length. Head faintly punctured behind, with an oblong rugose impression on each side in front. Thorax cordate, finely rugose-punctate. Elytra shorter and wider in proportion than in crepitans, shoulders broader and more prominent, sides very little wider behind the middle, obsoletely striated, interstices faintly punc- tured ; body beneath entirely rusty red. Length 2-3 lines. This species is usually smaller than the smallest examples of crepitans, and in form more delicate, and may at once be recog- nized by an abbreviated red dash at the base of the suture. Its claim to be admitted into our British fauna rests apparently on very few examples ; the first recorded by Mr. Curtis as having been captured by Dr. Leach in Devonshire ; a second reputed to have been taken by the Rev. F. W. Hope at Southend; and a third, in Mr. Stephens's collection, supposed to have been found near Hastings. There are others in the collection of the late Mr. Vigors, and in that of the Rev. A. Matthews (which last were obtained from Mr. Vigors), said to have been captured in Norfolk. Genus 7. TARUS, Clairville. (CYMINDIS, Latreille.) Mentum dente medio integro. Ligula obtusa ; paraglossis mem- branaceis, ei aqualibus, apice rotundatis. Palpi maxillares externi filiformes, articulo ultimo cylindrico, labiales articulo ultimo securiformi. Mandibulse breves externe profunde sulcat(K. Labrum quadratum, apice truncatum. Tarsi articulis integris ; unguiculis serratis. 1 . T. humeralis : niger, parce punctatus ; elytris striatis, mar- gine laterali macula humerali ore antennis pedibusque ferrugineis. Carabus humeralis, Fab. S. El. 1. 181. Lebia humeralis, Dufts. Faun. 2. 240. Cymindis humeralis, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 1/2. — Dej. Spec. 1. 204; Icon. 1. 80. pi. 8.— Sturm, D. F, 7. 8.— Erichson, Kafer, 693. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 7. Tarus humeralis, Steph. Mand. 1. 33. pi. 2, et Manual, p. 9. Black and glabrous. Head large, thickly punctured ; mouth, palpi and antennae red. Thorax cordate, longer than in the next species, sides less dilated and rounded in front (PI. I. f. 3), much narrowed behind, broadly margined, slightly rounded at the base, with the posterior angles minute but slightly promi- 22 CARABID.E. — TARUS. nent, disk finely and sparingly punctured, sides more coarsely punctured, the base with a deep fovea near each hinder angle ; scutellum pitchy red, punctured. Elytra oblong-ovate, rounded at the shoulders, rather widest behind the middle, deeply striated, the striae obsoletely punctured, interstices also finely punctured, the outer margins testaceous almost to the extremity, and a large oblong patch of the same colour on the shoulders connected with the marginal streak; body beneath pitchy red, legs testaceous red. Length 4-5 lines. This insect is larger and has a more elongate form than the next species, from which it is distinguishable in the structure and colour of the thorax, which is longer, narrower, and entirely black. It is of very rare occurrence in Britain, but according to Stephens has been taken at Swansea, and near Cuckfield, Sussex. There is a single example only in the Stephen sian collection. 2. T. axillaris : fusco-iiiger, subpubescens, subtiliter punctatus, thorace rufo, elytris punctato-striatis, margine laterali lineoldque humerali ore antennis pedibusque ferrugineis. Carabus axillaris, Fab. Ent. S. 1. 132 (1792-8). Tarus axillaris, Steph. Mand. 5. 388, et Manual, p. 9. Lebia homagrica., Dufts. Faun. 2. 240. Cymindis homagrica, Sturm, D. F. 7. 10. — Dej. Spec. 1. 208 ; Icon. 1. 83. pi. 9.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 7.— Redt. Faun. Aust. 74. Tarus homagricus, Steph. Mand. 5. 369, et Manual, p. 10. T. angularis, Steph. Mand. 1. 31, et Manual, p. 10. T. Icevigatus, Steph. Mand. I. 32. T. macularis, Steph. Mand. 5. 368. T. coadnutus, Steph. Mand. 5. 369, et Manual, p. 9. Fuscous black, slightly pubescent. Head large, black, finely punctured behind, but with the sides and an oblong impression on each side in front more coarsely punctured; palpi and antennae red. Thorax cordate, short, very wide in front (PI. I. f. 4), sides rounded below the anterior angles, much rounded behind so as to leave the posterior angles very minute, ferruginous red, thickly punctured, more coarsely so on the sides, having a slender dorsal line and a round fovea on each side at the base. Elytra wide and rather short, shoulders very prominent, dilated behind the middle, apex obliquely truncate, deeply striated, striae finely punctured, interstices thickly punctured, the punctures in some examples finer than in others, fuscous black, with an oblong patch on the shoulders, and the entire margin testaceous, and sometimes with a more or less pitchy-red spot near the extremity of the wing-cases ; thorax and breast beneath CARABID.E. TARUS. 23 reddish, punctured ; abdomen black, smooth and shining ; legs ferruginous. Length 3|— 4 lines. The insects recorded by Mr. Stephens under the names T. axillaris, coadnutus, lavigatus, homagricus, angularis and ma- culariSy if they have no other representatives but those contained in the Stephensian cabinet, must all be assigned to this species. Found in chalky districts, but local. Dorking, at the foot of Box hill ; Freshwater, Isle of Wight ; at the back of the Castle in the Isle of Portland ; New Forest, &c., late in August and September, and occasionally in April and May. 3. T. vaporariorum : niger, subpubescens profunde punctatus ; elytris punctato-striatis basi ferrugineisy ore antennis pedibusque testaceis. Carabus vaporariorum, Linn. S. N. 2. 671. Cymindis basalis, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 175. — Sturm, D. F. 7. 15. — Redt. Faun. Aust. 74. Tarus basalis, Curtis, Ent. pi. 235.— Steph. Mand. 1. 177, et Manual, p. 10. Cymindis punctata, Dej. Spec. 1. 214 ; Icon. 1. 92. pi. 10. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 8. Head and thorax black, coarsely punctured, palpi and antennae ferruginous. Thorax heart-shaped, rather narrow, sides rounded in front, contracted behind, posterior angles acute and prominent, each with a very obsolete fovea. Elytra oblong-ovate, slightly pubescent, punctate-striated, pitchy black or pitchy chestnut, with a more or less distinct red dash on the shoulders and covering the entire base ; body beneath pitchy black, deeply punctured; legs red. Length 4-4^ lines. This insect cannot be confounded with the preceding. The form is narrower and more elongate ; the punctuation, especially on the head and thorax, is very coarse; the thorax is considerably smaller, more contracted, and has the posterior angles distinctly acute and prominent; the elytra also are narrower, the shoulders rounded and narrowed, not at all prominent like those of the preceding species, and the entire base is red, but the lateral margins concolorous with the rest of the wing-cases, and the underside is thickly punctured and pubescent. In the Linnsean collection we find this species labelled as the true Carabus vaporariorum, Linn. I have accordingly restored the name. It is found in mountainous districts in the north of England, Scotland, and North Wales. Midgley Moor, near Halifax : " on the moors near Twizel," Mr. Selby. I have taken it abundantly on Griben Oernant, near Llangollen, about the middle of August. 24 CARABID^E. POLYSTICHUS. Genus 8. POLYSTICHUS, Bonelli. Men turn breve, dente medio abbreviate, dilatato, emarginato. Ligula membranacea apice obtusa, paraglossis membranaceis, ei adnatis. Palpi articulo ultimo paulb crassiore, subsecuri- formi. Mandibulse breviusculce vix prominulce. Labrum quadratum, apice truncatum. « 1. P. fasciolatus : brunneus,pubescens, valdepunctatus, elytrorum vittd abbreviatd pectore abdomine pedibusque ferrugineis. Carabus fasciolatus, Oliv. Ent. 3. 33. Galerita fasciolata, Fab. S. El. 1. 216. Polystichus fasciolatus, Sturm, D. F. 7. 69. — Dej. Spec. 1. 194; Icon. 1.72. pi. 7.— Steph.Mand. 1. 13.— Curtis, Ent.pl. 2£3. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 6. P. vittatus, Steph. Manual, p. 10. Pitchy red, pubescent. Head much produced in front, and coarsely punctured; palpi and antennae rusty red. Thorax elongate, heart-shaped, sides rounded in front, much narrowed behind, posterior angles acute, coarsely punctured, with an oblong fovea on each side at the base. Elytra very pubescent, with a red streak extending from the base to about the middle of each elytron, shoulders rounded, sides parallel, apex truncate, deeply striated, the stria? and interstices thickly and finely punctured : head and thorax beneath pitchy red, coarsely punctured ; abdomen pale, very minutely punctured ; legs rusty red. Length 5 lines. Very rare. " Once in profusion under a heap of stones, near Southwold, Suffolk, in April 1828." C. J. Hewitson, Esq. I captured a single specimen near Sandown, in the Isle of Wight, in April 1846. Subfam. 2. SCARITIDES, Westwood. Genus 9. CLIVINA, Latreille. Mentum dente medio acuto, lobis lateralibus cequali. Ligula cornea, elongata, acuminata : paraglossis membranaceis, an- gustis, linearibus, lignite cequalibus. Palpi articulo ultimo acuminato. Mandibulse mediocres, subdentat thorace subcordato pedibus elytrisque rufo-testaceis, his postice nigris, suturd margine summo maculdque communi rufo-testaceis. Carabus bipustulatus, Fab. S. El. 1. 203. Amblychus bipustulatus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 74. Badister bipustulatus, Sturm, D. F. 3. 186.— Dej. Spec. 2. 406; Icon. 223. pi. 101. — Steph. Mand. 1. 72, et Manual, p. 22. — Erichson, Kafer, 23. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 49. B. microcephalus, Steph. Mand. 5. 373, et Manual, p. 22. Var. j3. capite paulo majore, thorace breviore, scutello rufescente. B. lacertosus, Sturm, D. F. 3. 188.— Steph. Mand. 5. 374, et Manual, p. 22. Head black, in some examples very small, in others large, but always narrower than in the next species, basal joint of the antennae testaceous. Thorax testaceous red, subcordate, sides rounded and narrowed behind and the posterior angles rather rotundate (PI. I. f. 16), the dorsal furrow very fine, the base furnished with two fovese. Elytra oblong, wider than the thorax, simply striated, testaceous red in front with the suture and margins paler, having a broad cyaneous patch behind including a common reddish testaceous spot before the apex varying con- siderably in shape from round to oblong and occasionally obsolete; scutellum usually black, but sometimes pitchy red ; breast wholly black, legs testaceous. Length 2|-3 lines. Common. 2. B. unipustulatus : capite thoracis latitudine nigro, thorace breviore postice magis angustato, pectoris scapulis pedibus elytrisque rufo-testaceis, his postice nigris, suturd margine summo maculdque communi ru/O'-testaceis. Bonelli, Obs. Ent. Mem. de 1'Acad. Imp. Turin, 1811-1812, p. 443.— Erichson, Kiifer, 22.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 49. B. cephalotes, Dej. Spec. 2. 406; Icon. 2. 223. pi. 100.— Curtis, Ent. pi. 139.— Steph. Mand. 1. 72, et Manual, p. 22. B. suturalis, Steph. Mand. 1. 73, et Manual, p. 22. Larger than bipustulatus. Head broader, about as wide as the thorax, very much depressed in front, the basal joint of the antennae testaceous only at its base. Thorax considerably shorter (PI. I. f. 17), wide in front, and much narrower behind than in the allied species, with the posterior angles more rotundate, the dorsal CARABID.E. — BADISTER. 61 furrow more deeply impressed, and the basal fovese larger and more strongly marked; scutellum red. Elytra more deeply striated, testaceous red over a more considerable space in front, with the suture and margins paler, and an oblong blue-black or cyaneous patch behind the middle enclosing a semilunar or oblong or roundish testaceous red spot common to both wing-cases be- fore the apex ; breast black with a pale testaceous spot on the scapulars ; legs also testaceous. Length 3 lines. Local. Newark; Battersea fields and Hammersmith marshes at the roots of willows ; (< in profusion at Winterbourne Stoke, Wilts, in March and April," Rev. G. T. Rudd. (TRIMORPHUS, Stephens.} 3. B. peltatus : nigro-aneus, micans, thoracis elytrorumque mar- gine summo pedibmque brunneo-testaceis. (PI. I. f. C.) Carabus peltatus, Panz. Faun. 37. — Dufts. Faun. 2. 147. Amblychus peltatus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 76. Badister peltatus, Sturm, D. F. 3. 189. — Dej. Spec. 2. 408; Icon. 2. 226. pi. 1 0 1 .— Erichson, Kafer, 24.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 49. Trimorphus Erro, Newman, Ent. Mag. 5. 489. — Steph. Manual, p. 23. This species, which is about the size of a smallest bipustulatus, is obscure brassy black, very shining, especially on the surface of the elytra ; margins of the thorax and elytra narrowly edged with brownish testaceous. Head black, smooth and shining ; antennae slender, brownish black, base of the first joint paler. Thorax subquadrate, sides rounded below the anterior angles, thence narrowed behind, posterior angles obtuse, dorsal furrow deep, base with two large impressed fovese. Elytra wider than the thorax, oblong, slightly convex, distinctly striated, the striae impunctate with the exception of two small impressions on the second ; the surface suffused with bright cyaneous reflections in certain lights ; underside of the body brownish black, legs dusky testaceous. Length 2^ lines. Three examples of this rare insect are ascertained to have been captured in England; one by Mr. Ingall near London, which is the insect described by Mr. Newman in the ' Entomological Magazine' under the name Trimorphus Erro ; two others have been obtained by Mr. S. Stephens near Hammersmith. 4. B. humeralis : nigro-obscurus, subnitidus ; thoracis margine elytrorum macula humerali margine pedibusque flavo-tes- taceis. Bonelli, Obs. Ent. Mem. de 1'Acad. Imp. Turin, 1811-1812, 62 CARABID.E. — LICINUS. p. 443.— Dej. Spec. 2. 410 ; Icon. 2. 227. pi. 101.— Erichson, Kafer, 23. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 49. B. sodalis, Sturm, D. F. 3. 191. Carabus dorsiger, Dufts. Faun. 2. 151. Trimorphus scapularis, Steph. Mand. 1. 180. T. confinis, Steph. Mand. 1. 181, et Manual, p. 23. Obscure black, with a cyaneous reflection on the elytra. Head round, smooth, depressed in front, mouth yellow, base of the first joint of the antennae testaceous, its apex together with the whole of the second, third and fourth joints brownish, the rest reddish, more or less obscure. Thorax obcordate, sides obliquely sloped and narrowed behind, margins pale, delicately reflexed and elevated towards the hinder angles which are rounded, disk transversely wrinkled, having a deep central longitudinal furrow and two large and very deep fovese at the base ; scutellum large, triangular and black. Elytra oblong-ovate, humeral angles rounded, sides very little rounded and only slightly widest be- hind, disk striated, the second stria with two impressions, and a series of deeper punctures on the margins, the latter together with the suture behind and a broad subquadrate spot widest behind on the shoulders testaceous yellow ; underside of the body brownish black ; legs pale yellow. Length 2 lines. This species is local, but widely distributed. " Carlisle in February and March," Mr. Heysham. "Earl's Court, Brompton," Mr. Waterhouse. "Battersea fields; Darenth; in Norfolk; Loch Awe, Scotland," Mr. Stephens. " Castle Wood, Morpeth," Mr. Scott. I have captured it near Hastings ; and for several years procured it annually in the spring from a copse near Shanklin, Isle of Wight. Genus 21. LICINUS, Latreille. Mentum dente media nullo. Ligula brevis, apice truncata ; para- glossis membranaceis, apice rotundatis, ei tequalibus. Palpi articulo ultimo securiformi. Mandibulse breves, obtuste. Labrum apice leviter emarginatum. Tarsi antici maris arti- culis duobus valde dilatatis, subtus dense spongiosis. 1. L. depressus : ater, thorace lateribus subrotundato, elytris oblongo-ovatis, punctato-striatis, inter stitiis planis, undique punctatissimis. Carabus depressus, Payk. Faun. 1. 110. Licinus depressus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 73. — Dej. Spec. 2. 401 ; Icon. 2. 217. pi. 99.— Curtis, Ent. pi. 75.— Steph. Mand. 1. 73, et Manual, p. 23. — Erichson, Kafer, 22. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 47. Carabus cassidens, 111. Kafer, 1. 159. CARABID.E. — LICINUS. 63 Entirely deep shining black, the elytra of the ? duller black. Head small, round, much depressed in front, very finely punctured, but a little smooth at the nape. Thorax widest in front with the angles a little acuminated, sides rounded and gradually narrowed towards the hinder angles which are rounded, disk rather convex, densely punctured, the dorsal furrow abbreviated, the base without foveae, but the lateral margins elevated especially at the hinder angles. Elytra oblong-ovate, rounded at the shoulders, apex obliquely truncate, moderately convex, finely striated, the striae obsoletely punctured, interstices flat and thickly punctured ; underside of the thorax and breast punctate ; cilia and claws red. Length 4^ lines. This species is found in chalky districts; near Canterbury, Dover, Box Hill, &c. in the autumn. 2. L. Silphoides : ater, thorace transverse lateribus rotundato, punctato, in media subl&vigato ; etytris ovatis, punctato- striatis, interstitiis subelevatis profunde punctatis, tribus magis elevatis. Carabus Silphoides, Fab. S. El. 1. 190. Licinus Silphoides, Sturm, D. F. 3. 177.— Dej. Spec. 2. 394 ; Icon. 2. 210. pi. 98.— Steph. Mand. 1. 73, et Manual, p. 23. Deep black. Head minutely punctured, depressed in front, with an elevated ridge on each side between the antennae con- nected by a curved transverse fold in front ; palpi and two joints at the base of the antennae pitchy black, the rest fuscous. Thorax transverse, very short and broad, anterior angles produced, sides regularly rounded, widest about the middle, margins elevated especially at the base, hinder angles rotundate, disk strongly punctured and wrinkled but a little smooth in the centre, with an abbreviated dorsal furrow and a broad obsolete fovea on each side at the base. Elytra ovate, broad, humeral angles rounded, sinuated before the apex, which latter is much produced, finely striated, the stria? deeply, regularly and remotely punctured, the interstices sparingly but deeply punctured and slightly elevated, the third, fifth and seventh more elevated, so as to present the appearance of three distinct raised lines ; body beneath minutely, sides of the breast coarsely punctured; cilia and claws red. Length 5|-6^ lines. In profusion on the south-east side of Box Hill in autumn. Found also in the Isle of Portland ; at Dover, &c. and in other chalky districts. Genus 22. OODES, Boneffi. Mentum dente media integro. Ligula apice liber a dilatataque ; paraglossis membranaceis. Palpi articulo ultimo cylindrico, 64 CARABID^E. OODES. apice truncato. Mandibulse rectiusculte, acuta. Labrum apice truncatum. Tarsi antici maris articulis tribus dilatatis, singulis subquadratis, subtus dense spongiosis. 1. O. Helopioides : oblongo-ovatus, ater, elytris subtiliter punc- tato-striatis. Carabus Helopioides, Fab. Ent. S. 1. 155.— Fab. S. El. 1. 196. Harpalus Helopioides, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 135. Oodes Helopoides, Sturm, D. F. 6. 66.— Dej. Spec. 2. 378 ; Icon. 2. 201. pi. 97. — Steph. Mand. 1. 125, et Manual, p. 35. — Erichson, Kafer, 96.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 47. Deep black. Head and thorax smooth and impunctate, the latter narrowed in front, then gradually widening till it becomes broad behind the middle, the posterior angles produced, the disk with a faint dorsal furrow and the base destitute of fovese. Elytra as broad as the thorax, oblong, the sides straight nearly to the extremity and the apex broadly rounded in some examples but slightly sinuated in others, convex, striated, the striae finely punctulated, with two minute impressions between the second and third from the suture, and a series on the exterior margin ; body beneath thickly punctured on the sides ; legs black, tarsi pitchy. Length 4i lines. The peculiarity of form in the species which represents this genus must always sufficiently distinguish it, especially its broad thorax equalling the elytra in width, and the oblong, convex and parallel form of the entire insect. 'It is not a very abundant species, or at any rate is rather local. It is found in marshy places, in the Cambridgeshire fens, more plentifully near Whittlesea Mere and at Herringstone near Dor- chester ; and according to Stephens in Hackney marshes ; Bat- tersea fields ; Abbots Ann, Hants ; Amesbury, Wilts, &c. Genus 23. CHKffiNIUS, Bonelli. Mentum dente medio bifido. Ligula cornea, apice libera dilatata- que ; paraglossis membranaceis apice liberis, earn vix super- antibus. Palpi articulo ultimo cylindrico, apice truncato. Mandibulae acuta, basi crenulata. Labrum apice truncatum vel obsolete sinuatum. Tarsi antici maris articulis tribus dilatatis, singulis subquadratis, subtus dense spongiosis. 1. C. sulcicollis : nigro-obscurus, pubescens ; thorace postice trisulcato, punctatissimo ; elytris obsolete punctato-striatis, interstitiis rugoso-granulatis ; antennis pedibusque nigris. Carabus sulcicollis striatis punctis- que tribus impressis; ore antennis pedibusque piceo-brunneis. 82 CARABID^E. ANCHOMENUS. Carabus junceus, Scop. Ent. Cam. 89 (1761). C. angusticollis, Fab. S. El. 1. 182. Harpalus angusticollis, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 81. Anchomenus angusticollis, Sturm, D. F. 5. 168. — Dej. Spec. 3. 104; Icon. 2. 343. pi. 116. — Erichson, Kafer, 108. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 57. Platynus angusticollis, Steph. Mand. 1. 83, et Manual, p. 25. Shining black. Head oblong, very smooth with an impression on each side, mouth, palpi and base of the antennae pitchy, the apical joints of the latter fuscous. Tliorcue widest in front a little below the anterior angles and much rounded in that part, then obliquely sloped and narrowed till just before the posterior angle, when it forms with the base a right angle with the apex a little acute and prominent, disk convex, the central line met in front by a deeper impression, the base with two deep foveae. Elytra broad, dilated behind the middle, the apex obliquely sinuated and produced, deeply and regularly striated, the stride very ob- soletely punctured, interstices elevated, the third with three distinct remote impressions ; legs brownish. Length 4J-5 lines. The name given to this species by Scopoli is restored in right of priority. Locally abundant under bark of trees, &c. (ANCHOMENUS, Bonelli.) 2. A. livens : nigro-piceus ; thorace oblongo-cordato, angulis posticis subrotundatis ; elytris oblongis, leviter striatis ; antennis pedibusque rufo-ferrugineis. Harpalus livens, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 149. Agonum livens, Steph. Mand. 1. 95, et Manual, p. 28. Anchomenus livens, Erichson, Kafer, 108. An. memnonius, Nicol. Col. Agr. Hal. 17. 1. — Sturm, D. F. 5. 170.— Dej. Spec. 3. 110; Icon. 2. 345. pi. 116. Agonum bipunctatum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 184. Pitchy black, shining. Head very smooth, with a small fovea on each side at the base of the antennae and two indistinct red dots between the eyes ; palpi and antennae rusty red, with the base of the second, third and fourth joints of the latter dusky. Thorax oblong, heart-shaped, anterior margin rather straight, sides rounded in front, obliquely narrowed behind, posterior angles also rounded, base with two deep fovese, disk with nume- rous transverse wrinkles on each side the impressed dorsal furrow. Elytra rather oblong, shoulders rounded and slightly prominent, sides widest behind the middle, moderately striated, margins with CARABID^E. ANCHOMENUS. 83 a series of deep impressions ; underside smooth and impunctate, legs red. Length 4 lines. Very rare. " Bognor ; Hastings ; Brighton ; and on the Nor- folk coast." Mr. Stephens. In August and September 1849, I captured three specimens in Bridge Wood, near Tunbridge Wells. Mr. Janson obtained one last year in Highgate Wood, at sugar placed to attract Noctuce. 3. A. dorsalis : capite thoraceque viridibus, hoc angustato sub- cordato, angulis posticis subrectis ; elytris oblongo-ovatis, striatis, ferrugineis, macula communi posticd viridi-cyaned ; antennarum basi pedibusque ferrugineis. Carabus dorsalis, Miiller, Prod. Zool. Dan. 78 (17/6). Buprestis bicolor, Fourc. Ent. Paris, 1. 44 (1785). Carabus prasinus, Thumb. Nov. Spec. 4. 74. f. 87 (1785).— Fab. Maut. 1. 204 (1787).— Payk. Mon. 57 (1790). Harpalus prasinus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 83. Anchomenus prasinus, Sturm, D. F. 5. 171. — Dej. Spec. 3. 1 1G ; Icon. 2. 347. pi. 117.— Steph. Hand. 1. 82, et Manual, p. 25. — Erichson, Kafer, 118.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 58. Carabus viridanus, Fab. Mant. 1. 204. — Payk. Mon. 57. The head and thorax are green, the elytra testaceous with a large blue-black or greenish cyaneous patch on the disk common to both and extending from above the middle to the apex, leaving the margins broadly testaceous. Head large, convex, smooth, having an impression on each side at the base of the antennae, the latter are rusty red, with their base and the palpi paler. Thorax subcordate, narrow, widest below the anterior angles and rounded in that part, then contracted till just before the posterior angles, which are almost right angles and slightly elevated, the dorsal line abbreviated and met before and behind by a transverse impression, the base also has two oblong foveas. Elytra oblong- ovate, the humeral angles and sides rounded, the apex obliquely sinuated, punctate-striated, having three larger impressions on the third interstice and a series next the eighth stria ; legs pale red. Length 3 lines. This species is described under the name C. dorsalis, in Miiller's ' Prodromus/ which consequently claims priority. Commonly distributed. 4. A. pallipes : alatus, nigro-piceus ; thorace cordato postice coarctato punctatoque, angulis posticis acutiusculis ; elytris oblongo-ovatis, striatis , margine plerumque rufescente ; an- tennis pedibusque pallidis. Carabus pallipes, Fab. Mant. 1. 202(1 787).— Fab. S. El. 1 . 187. G 2 84 CARABID^E. ANCHOMENUS. Anchomenus pallipes, Dej. Spec. 3. 119; Icon. 2. 349. pi. 117.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 58. Carabus albipes, Fab. S. El. 1. 187. Harpalus albipes, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 82. Anchomenus albipes, Sturm, D. F. 5. 175. — Steph. Mand. 1. 82, et Manual, p. 25. — Erichson, Kafer, 118. Winged, pitchy black or rusty red, witb the margins of the elytra sometimes paler ; antennae ferruginous, the base and palpi pale. Thorax cordate, delicately margined, much contracted behind, posterior angles minute and acute, disk faintly channeled and transversely wrinkled, base depressed and strongly punctured and with two oblong fovese. Elytra very broad, ovate, shoulders rounded, simply striated, with three impressions on the third interstice and a series near the outer margin ; legs pale. Length 3J lines. Very common. 5. A. oblongus : apterus, rufo-piceus ; thorace elongato angus- tato, postice punctato, angulis posticis acutiusculis ; elytris punctato-striatis ; antennis pedibusque pallidis. Carabus oblongus, Fab. Ent. S. 1. 140 (1792).— Fab. S. El. 1. 185. Harpalus oblongus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 99. Anchomenus oblongus, Sturm, D. F. 5. 1 73. — Dej. Spec. 3. 121 ; Icon. 2. 351. pi. 117.— Steph. Mand. 1. 82, et Manual, p. 25. —Erichson, Kafer, 118.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 59. Wingless, pitchy or rusty red. Head elongate, smooth and shining with an impression on each side between the antennae which with the palpi are ferruginous red. Thorax elongate and narrowed, widest in front below the angles and rather rounded, contracted behind, posterior angles prominent, disk convex, sides and base not depressed, but much punctured, the dorsal furrow very indistinct and terminating in front in numerous small punctures. Elytra oblong-ovate, narrowest at the shoulders, sides sinuated before the middle, dilated behind and the apex rounded, very convex, deeply punctate-striated, pitchy castaneous; legs pale testaceous. Length 2f lines. Rather local, but extremely abundant in marshy places. (AGONUM, Bonelli.) 6. A. marginatus : viridis, nitidus ; thorace lateribus subrotun- dato ; elytris oblongo-ovatis, subtiliter striatis, punctis tribus impressis, margine tibiisque flavo-pallidis. CARABINE. ANCHOMENUS. 85 Carabus marginatus, Linn. F. S. 804. — Fab. S. El. 1. 199. Harpalus marginatus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 154. Agonum marginatum, Dej. Spec. 3. 133; Icon. 2. 355. pi. 118. — Steph. Mand. 1. 85, et Manual, p. 25. Anchomenus marginatus, Erichson, Kafer, 109. Rich satiny green, head and thorax with a coppery tinge, rarely dark purplish green, the lateral margins of the thorax narrowly, the entire margins of the elytra broadly edged with yellow. Head finely wrinkled, eyes prominent, antennae pitchy black, basal joint testaceous. Thorax short, sides regularly and equally rounded, posterior angles rounded, disk very much wrinkled, the dorsal furrow fine, terminating before in a deeper curved impression, base with two foveae close to the hinder angles. Elytra broad, shoulders rather elevated and rounded, sides somewhat parallel, apex produced, finely striated, interstices flat, the third with three deep punctures and a series on the margin, suture dull reddish copper ; legs pitchy black, tibiae pale yellow. Length 4- lines. Plentiful in marshy places, banks of streams, &c. 7. A. sexpunctatus : capite thoraceque viridi-aneis, hoc trans- verso, angulis posticis rotundatis ; elytris rubro-cupreis, subtiliter punctato-striatis, interstitio tertio punctis sex impressis. Carabus sexpunctatus, Linn. F. S. 807.— Fab. S. El. 1. 199. Harpalus sexpunctatus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 156. Agonum sexpunctatum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 202. — Dej. Spec. 3. 140; Icon. 2. 360. pi. 118.— Steph. Mand. 1. 86, et Manual, p. 25. Anchomenus sexpunctatus, Erichson, Kafer, 1 10. Head and thorax brilliant green, brassy, sides of the latter reddish copper ; palpi and antennae black. Thorax transverse, broad, sides rounded below the anterior angles, also rounded and narrowed behind, margins reflexed, and together with a broad punctate fovea near each hinder angle very rugose and punctured, the disk also transversely wrinkled, and faintly channeled down the centre. Elytra broad and short, rather widest behind the middle, otherwise the sides appear almost straight, apex slightly produced, rather more convex than mar- ginatus, very finely striated, the striae faintly punctured, inter- stices slightly rugose, the third with six deep impressions, more rarely with five, seven or eight, and a series on the external margin most frequent at the base and near the apex, the entire surface is brilliant coppery red, very shining, with the scutellum and entire margin green ; underside dark green, legs brassy 86 CARABINE. ANCHOMENUS. black, femora, and occasionally the tibise greenish black. Length 31 lines. This brilliant species varies occasionally in colour, being sometimes golden green, purplish or violet, rarely obscure black. It is somewhat local, but occasionally abundant. Rather plen- tiful in a damp wood near Newark, Notts; Gamlingay and Paxton Woods ; Coombe Wood ; Epping Forest ; Hertford, &c. I have also taken it on the coast, near Ramsgate. 8. A. modestus : capite thoraceque cupreo-aneis, elytris sub- parallelis, viridibus, suturd cupreo-aned, tenue punctato- striatis, punctis 6 impressis ; antennis pedibusque nigris. Agonum modestum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 205. — Dej. Spec. 3. 138 ; Icon. 2. 359. pi. 118. Anchomenus modestus, Erichson, Kafer, 109. Carabus Austriacus, Dufts. Faun. 2. 135. Agonum Austriacum, Curtis, Ent. pi. 183. — Steph. Mand. 1. 87, et Manual, p. 26. Head and thorax coppery with a greenish tinge, the former oblong and narrowish; palpi and antennae black. Thorax quadrate, short ; sides regularly and equally rounded from the anterior angles to the base, lateral margins reflexed and rather elevated at the hinder angles and somewhat rugose, the angles scarcely rounded, disk very much wrinkled transversely, with an impressed dorsal line, and two broad, deep, subpunctate fovese at the base. Elytra wide, sides almost parallel, apex obliquely sinuated, green, with the suture obscure coppery as far as the first stria, finely striated, some of the striae at the base minutely punctured, interstices flat, the third with six punctures, and the outer margin with a series of deeper impressions most numerous at the base ; body beneath greenish black, sides of the head green and transversely strigose ; legs black. Length 4 lines. This insect is distinct from C. Austriacus, Fab., though it is identical with Carabus Austriacus, Dufts., and Agonum Austri- acum of Dejean's Catalogue. It is much more slender, the thorax is smaller, narrower and shorter, not much contracted behind as in that species, nor the sides so widely margined, and the hinder angles are less rounded and less obtuse, in which respects it accords more with the form of marginatus, while Austriacus corresponds with 6-punctatus in the structure of the thorax; the elytra also are narrower and more parallel, not oblong-ovate as in Austriacus, and instead of a wide coppery common streak at the base, have the suture alone as far as the first stria dull coppery or purplish copper. CARABIDJE. — ANCHOMENUS. 87 Extremely rare in Britain, the only localities recorded being " Kingsbridge, Devon ; Clengre, Gloucestershire ; and in Corn- wall," in the spring. — Mr. Stephens. 9. A. fulgens : igneo-cupreus ; thorace lateribus rotundato ; ely- tris oblongo-ovatis, striatis, striis subtiliter punctatis, punctisque majoribus 4, 5 aut 6 impressis. Agonum fulgens., Davis, London's Mag. Nat. Hist. 5. 247. — Steph. Mand. 5. 374, et Manual, p. 26. Brilliant fiery copper tinged with purple and green, margins of the thorax and of the elytra golden green, the suture also occasionally greenish. Head smooth behind, transversely strigose in front, with a small fovea on each side at the base of the antennae; mouth, palpi and three joints at the base of the antennae black with greenish reflections, apical joints fuscous. Thorax subquadrate, sides moderately rounded and narrowed behind, margins broadly reflexed and with two large fovese at the base very rugose, the rest of the disk transversely strigose and the dorsal furrow distinctly marked. Elytra oblong-ovate, slightly widest behind the middle, apex obliquely sinuated, very finely punctate-striated, with five distinct impressions between the second and third striae, and in some examples another nearly at the termination of the seventh, and an irregular series on the margin deepest at the apex ; body beneath dark shining green with a brassy tinge, femora and tibiae shining black with a coppery reflection, tarsi wholly black. Length 3 lines. Dr. Schaum in his remarks on the Stephensian species (Ent. Zeitung), observes that this insect tc is identical with A. Ericeti" I have compared it with typical examples of the latter insect which Mr. Wollaston brought from Dr. Heer of Zurich, and find that it is perfectly distinct. A. Ericeti is a variety of A. sex-punctatus, and is so recorded in Heer's Fauna Helvetica, p. 61 ; but it is impossible, after the most careful examination, to connect the present species with that insect. It is found upon the high moors at Hebden Bridge, Luddenden Foot, &c., near Halifax, and on other moors near York, early in the spring. " Rare near Paisley," Mr. M. Young. 1 0. A. laevis : capite thoraceque viridi-ceneis, hoc transverso, angulis posticis rotundatis ; elytris fusco-aneis, subtiliter striatis, interstitio tertio punctis tribus impressis ; antennis basi tibiisque testaceis. Carabus l-puncta- CARABID.E. ANCHOMENUS. 91 turn, contained in the Stephensian collection, must likewise re- ceive the same reference. This insect is very common in marshy places, on river banks, &c. 15. A. gracilis : niger, nitidus ; thorace subquadrato, angulis posticis rotundatis ; elytris oblong o-ovatis, subtiliter striatis, punctis quinque impressis ; antennis pedibusque totis nigris. Agonum gracile, Sturm, D. F. 5. 197. — Dej. Spec. 3. 162 ; Icon. 3. 379. pi. 121. Harpalus gracilis, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 4. 449. Anchomenus gracilis, Erichson, Kafer, 116. Agonum atratum, Steph. Maud. 1. 91, et Manual, p. 27. This species is much more delicately formed than the preceding and differs in several particulars. The thorax is more quadrate, not so wide in front, nor so much narrowed at the base, but the hinder angles are more broadly rounded; the elytra are less ovate, the shoulders not so much narrowed but broader and more prominent, the sides less rounded in the middle, but straighter and the apex broader, they are also much more delicately striated ; and the entire surface of the insect, including the antennae, palpi and legs, is uniformly black. Length 3 lines. The only locality in which I have found the insect is Bridge Wood, near Tunbridge Wells. "Dalmeney Park and near Paisley," Murray's Catalogue. 16. A. scitulus : niger, nitidus ; thorace obcordato,posticeangus- tato; elytris oblongo-ovatis, subvirescentibus, subtiliter striatis, punctis quinque impressis ; pedibus nigro-piceis. Agonum scitulum, Dej. Spec. 3. 162 ; Icon. 2. 378. pi. 121. Ag. consimile, Steph. Mand. 1. 90, et Manual, p. 27. Shining black, with a faint greenish tinge on the elytra. Head narrow, convex, with an oblong fovea on each side in front ; tip of the mandibles pitchy, palpi and antennae pitchy black. Thorax obcordate, sides rounded and widest rather before the middle, obliquely narrowed behind, posterior angles subrotundate, disk convex, dorsal furrow deeply impressed, base with a large oblong smooth fovea close to each hinder angle. Elytra oblong-ovate, slightly widening behind the middle, convex, finely striated, the third stria with from three to five faint punctures ; legs pitchy black, femora slightly metallic. Length 3 lines. This insect is smaller and narrower than micans, and like the preceding species in colour except that it has a greenish tinge on the elytra. The head is narrower than in micans, the frontal 92 CARABID^E. ANCHOMENUS. impressions smaller; the thorax more obliquely sloped and narrowed behind, disk smoother, but the dorsal furrow deeper ; the elytra also are much narrower. There are two examples under the name consimile in the Stephensian collection. 1 7. A. micans : subtsneo-virescens ; thorace subquadrato, postice subrotundato ; elytris oblong o-ovatis, subtiliter striatis, punctis tribus impressis ; pedibus fusco-piceis. Agonum micans, Nicolai, Col. Agr. Hal. 19. 7. — Steph. Mand. 1. 91, et Manual, p. 27. Anchomenus micans, Erichson, Kafer, 115. Carabus pelidnus, Dufts. Faun. 2. 144. Agonum pelidnum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 194. — Dej. Spec. 3. 161 ; Icon. 2. 377. pi. 121. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 63. Ag. cursitor, Steph. Mand. 1. 91, et Manual, p. 27. Oblong-ovate, obscure brassy green. Head smooth and shining, with a slight impression on each side in front ; mandibles pitchy red, palpi and antennae black, sometimes the base of the latter pitchy fuscous. Thorax subquadrate, delicately margined, sides rounded, rather narrowed behind and the posterior angles also somewhat rounded, each having a deep oblong impression. Elytra with the shoulders rounded and the sides nearly straight or very moderately dilated behind the middle, finely striated, having about three small punctures between the second and third striae, also a series of larger impressions irregularly disposed along the margin ; legs pitchy, tibiae and tarsi pitchy fuscous. Length 3 lines. Agonum cursitor, Kirby, corresponds with this species, which is rather a widely-distributed insect in marshes, damp woods and on river banks. " Dunston and on the banks of the Team, under the bark of willows, and in the decayed stems of thistles in moist ditches." Messrs. Hardy and Bold. 18. A. piceus : capite thoraceque nigris, hoc subquadrato, an- gulis posticis rotundatis ; elytris oblongis leviter striatis punctis quinque impressis pedibusque piceo-testaceis. Carabus piceus, Linn. S. N. 2. 672. C. picipes, Fab. S. El. 1. 203.— Dufts. Faun. 2. 243. Harpalus picipes, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 151. Agonum picipes, Sturm, D. F. 5. 196. — Dej. Spec. 3. 164 ; Icon. 2. 381. pi. 122.— Steph. Mand. 1. 93, et Manual, p. 27. Head and thorax black ; mouth, palpi, and basal joint of the CARABID^E. ANCHOMENUS. 93 antennae pitchy. Thorax subquadrate (PI. II. f. 2), small and narrowish, sides very slightly rounded and not much narrower behind than in front, posterior angles rounded, disk depressed, transversely wrinkled, dorsal line entire, base with two deep smooth fovese. Elytra wider than the thorax, much narrower than in the preceding species, oblong, shoulders rounded, the sides not dilated and rounded but almost parallel, moderately convex, very finely striated, with about five or six small punctures between the second and third striae and also an interrupted series of small foveae on the exterior margin ; legs pitchy testa- ceous. Length 3 lines. In its general habit this insect bears some resemblance to the preceding, but the elytra are narrower and more parallel and uniformly pitchy brown or fuscous, without any tinge of green. It cannot be confounded with pale pitchy examples of fuliginosus, because its form is wholly dissimilar, the thorax being considerably narrower and more quadrate, and the elytra also narrower and more parallel. This is the Carabus piceus of Linnaeus, and is so labelled in the Linnaean Collection. It is a somewhat local species, but abundant in damp woods, marshes, and on river banks in various parts of the kingdom. 19. A. pelidnus : nigro-piceus ; thorace oblongo, postice coarc- tato, angulis posticis subrotundatis ; elytris elongato-ovatis, striatis, striis subtilissime crenulatis, punctis tribus vel quatuor impressis ; pedibus rufo-piceis. Carabus pelidnus, Payk. Faun. 1. 134. Harpalus pelidnus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 150. Agonum affine, Steph. Mand. 1. 94, et Manual, p. 28. Elongate, narrow, deep pitchy black; mouth, tip of the mandibles, base of the palpi and basal joint of the antennae rufous, the rest of the antennae and of the palpi pitchy. Thorax oblong, widest in front, sides moderately rounded, much con- tracted behind, the posterior angles very little evident, disk very convex, much wrinkled transversely on each side the dorsal furrow, base with a smooth impunctate oblong impression near each angle. Elytra elongate, about twice the width of the thorax, shoulders rounded and a little elevated, the sides rather parallel or very slightly rounded till behind the middle and narrowed to the extremity, disk very convex, strongly striated, the striae impunctate, but some of them appearing under a magnifying glass to be faintly crenulated, on the second stria near the apex there is a small impression and two others on the 94 CARABID^l. ANCHOMENUS. third before the middle, the exterior margin being also furnished with the usual series of fovese; legs pitchy red. Length 3^ lines. This species may immediately be distinguished from any of the preceding by its more elongate narrow form, in which respect it resembles Thoreyi, but independently of its dark colour it is rather larger, more convex, the elytra are more deeply striated, and the sides less parallel than in that insect. It is the true Carabus pelidnus of Paykull, and perfectly distinct from Ag. pe- lidnum, Steph., which corresponds with the next species. In the Stephensian cabinet it stands under the name Ag. affine, Steph. It is apparently one of our rarest species, and I have met with but two indigenous examples ; the one in the Stephensian cabinet above mentioned, captured near London ; and the other in my own, for which I am indebted to Mr. F. Bates, of Leicester, who procured it from under a heap of "vegetable matter (principally Ranunculus aquaticus), raked out of Groby Pool, near Leicester, in June or July." 20. A. Thoreyi : capite thoraceque nigro-piceis, hoc oblongo- ovato, postice coarctato, angulis posticis subrotundatis ; elytris rufescentibus, elongatis, subparallelis, subtiliter striatis, punctis tribus vel quatuor impressis ; antennis basi pedibusque rufescentibus. Agonum Thoreyi, Dej. Spec. 3. 165 ; Icon. 2. 382. pi. 122. Ag. pelidnum, Steph. Mand. 1. 94, et Manual, p. 28. Head black or pitchy black, smooth and convex ; mouth, palpi and basal joint of the antennse pitchy red, rest of the antennae obscure. Thorax pitchy black with the margins often narrowly rufous, sometimes the disk pitchy rufous with the margins paler, oblong-ovate, narrow, sides a little rounded, con- tracted behind, posterior margins rounded so that the hinder angles are very slightly evident, disk very convex, having numerous transverse wrinkles on each side the dorsal furrow and a very slight stria near each hinder angle. Elytra rufescent, with an obscure dash in the middle next the suture, elongate, narrow, about twice the width of the thorax, shoulders rounded, sides very nearly straight, disk very moderately convex, finely striated, the third stria with two punctures and the second with one or two placed as in the preceding species ; body beneath pitchy, with the thorax occasionally rufescent in less mature individuals ; legs red with the joints pitchy. Length 3 lines. This insect nearly resembles pelidnus, but it has always rufes- cent elytra ; it is also smaller ; the elytra are less convex, more CARABID.E. ANCHOMENUS. 95 finely striated and their sides more parallel. It was formerly abundant in the fens about Whittlesea Mere and in Cambridge- shire. It has been taken by the Rev. W. Little at Raehills, Dumfriesshire. 21. A. quadripunctatus : nigro-ceneus, thorace transverse, an- gulis posticis obtusis ; elytris oblongo-ovatis, subtiliter striatis, interstitio tertio foveolis quatuor impressis; pedibus nigris. (PI. I. f. E.) Carabus 4-punctatus, DeGeer, Ins.4. 102.— Dufts. Faun. 2. 146. Harpalus \-punctatus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 159. Agonum 4-punctatum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 21 7. — Dej. Spec. 3. 176; Icon. 2. 384. pi. 122. Anchomenus 4-punctatus, Erichson, Kafer, 112. Agonum cupratum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 218. This rare and remarkable species is smaller than any of the preceding. Head black, with a greenish tinge in the centre ; mouth, palpi and antennae black. Thorax greenish black or olivaceous, transverse, sides gradually rounded behind and with an elevated reflexed margin towards the posterior angles, disk convex, depressed towards the sides, base with two oblong fovese. Elytra oblong-ovate, broader than the base of the thorax, with the shoulders rounded, dilated behind the middle, finely striated, having four deep impressions between the second and third stria* (rarely five) somewhat irregularly disposed, greenish or blackish green, shining; body beneath and legs black. Length 2i lines. The only British example I have seen was taken at Long Benton, by Mr. T. J. Bold, of Newcastle-on-Tyne, and it is recorded by him in his Catalogue of the Insects of Northumber- land and Durham (p. 229). Genus 32. OLISTHOPUS, Dejean. Mentum dente medio nutto. Ligula apice truncata, paraglossis longior. Palpi articulo ultimo fusiformi, apice acuminato. Mandibulse breves, rectiusculce. Labrum quadratum, apice truncatum. Tarsi antici maris articulis tribus dilatatis, unguiculi simplices. 1. O. rotundatus : fusco-ceneus nitidus ; thorace semiorbiculato ; elytris oblongo-ovatis, striatis, striis obsolete punctatis, inter stitiis lavissimis, punctisque tribus impressis ; pedibus flavescentibus. 96 CARABID.E. — OLISTHOPUS. Carabus rotundatus, Payk. Mon. 41. — Payk. Faun. 1. 136. Harpalus rotundatus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 158. Agonum rotundatum, Sturm, D. F. 5. 213. Olisthopus rotundatus, Dej. Spec. 3. 177 ; Icon. 2. 388. pi. 123. — Steph. Mand. 1. 96,.et Manual, p. 28.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 64. Carabus rotundicollis, Marsham, Ent. 471. Odontonyx rotundicollis, Steph. Mand. 1. 96, et Manual, p. 28. Brassy brown, very shining. Head convex, smooth, foveated between the antennae, mouth, palpi and antennae pitchy brown, some of the joints of the latter at the base yellow. Thorax broad and short, semi-orbicular, acutely margined, disk convex, transversely wrinkled, the dorsal furrow slight, base with two foveae near the posterior angles, which together with the lateral margins are strongly punctured. Elytra oblong-ovate, rounded at the sides, rather narrowed at the apex, striated, the striae obsoletely punctured, interstices smooth and polished, having three deep impressions between the second and third striae and the usual series on the external margin ; legs pale yellow, with the underside of the body reddish pitchy. Length 3-31 lines. The difference between this insect and O. rotundicollis is imaginary. It is a very common species. Genus 33. PTEROSTICHUS, Bonelli. Mentum dente medio emarginato. Ligula apice truncata ; para- glossis membranaceis, linearibus, ei aqualibus. Palpi articulo ultimo breviore, cylindrico, apice truncato, Mandibulae mediocres, basi interne crenulatte, acuta. Labrum quadra- tum, apice truncatum. Tarsi antici maris articulis tribus dilatatis, singulis obcordatis, subtus biseriatim pectinato- setosis. This genus is adopted to comprehend that group of insects to which Dejean assigned the name Feronia*, but which had been separated by Bonelli and others, under the names Ptecilus, Ptero- stichus, Omaseus, Argutor, Steropus, Platysma, Abax, &c., such di- visions having been based chiefly upon certain external characters, which upon examination have not proved so in variable as to warrant their establishment as distinct genera. Redtenbacher divides them into two genera, Pcecilus and Pterostichus, and among the latter * The name Feronia cannot here be employed, because it had been proposed twenty years ago by Dr. Leach for a genus of Homalopterous Insects, and published with descriptive characters in the second volume of the Memoirs of the Wernerian Society. — J. F. Stephens. CARABID^E. PTEROSTICHUS. 97 includes Argutor. Heer again maintains Argutor as a genus, on the ground of some slight variations in the mandibles and palpi, and assigns Poscilus, as well as Abax, Platysma and Omaseus, as subgenera to Pterostichus. Since, however, these distinctions appear to be unsatisfactory, seeing that the charac- ters of some insects assigned to one group blend into those of others which are given to a different group, so as to render it extremely difficult to determine to which they really ought to belong, I have merely inserted the names in brackets, for the convenience of those English entomologists who may possibly be less familiar with the more generally received arrangement. (PCECILUS, Bonetti.) 1 . P. cupreus : alatus, oblongo-ovatus plerumque viridi-vel cu- preo-ceneus, nitidus ; thorace transverse, postice utrinque bistriato ; elytris striato-punctatis punctisque tribus postice impressis ; antennarum articulis duobtis basi rufis. Carabus cupreus, Linn. F. S. 801.— Fab. S. El. 1. 195. Harpalus cupreus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 114. Platysma cuprea, Sturm, D. F. 5. 94. Feronia cuprea, Dej. Spec. 3. 207; Icon. 3. 12. pi. 126. Pcecilus cupreus , Steph. Mand. 1. 110, et Manual, p. 32. Pterostichus cupreus, Erichson, Kafer,67. — Heer, Faun. Helv.68. Var. b. Platysma versicolor, Sturm, D. F. 5. 99. Pcecilus versicolor, Steph. Mand. 1. 110, et Manual, p. 32. This species presents various shades of green, brassy green, brassy, coppery, purplish or black, very brilliant and shining. Head thickly and minutely punctured, having a fovea on each side, antenna3 black, with two joints at the base red. Thorax narrowed in front, transverse, sides moderately rounded, broadly margined, posterior angles not quite complete right angles, disk convex in front, depressed on the sides and at the base, the latter punctured, having also two longitudinal fovese on each side, the outer one shortest and close to the angle. Elytra ob- long-ovate, slightly narrowed in front, sides a little rounded, deeply striated, the striae finely punctured, the interstices convex, the third with three distinct impressed punctures behind ; under- side greenish black, thorax, breast and sides of the abdomen in front more or less punctured, legs black. Length 4^-6 lines. P. versicolor is a rather smaller and narrower variety of this species, which is extremely common. 2. P. dimidiatus : alatus, oblongus; capite thoraceque subqua- drato postice utrinque bistriato cupreis ; elytris viridibus, 98 CARABIDvE. PTEROSTICHUS. subparallelis, striato-punctatis ; antennarum articulis duo- bus basi subtus rufo-piceis. Carabus dimidiatus, Oliv. Ent. 3. 35.— Fab. S. El. 1. 194. Platysma dimidiata, Sturm, D. F. 5. 90. Feronia dimidiata, Dej. Spec. 3. 213 ; Icon. 3. 16. pi. 126. Pcecilus dimidiatus, Steph. Mand. 1. 109, et Manual, p. 31. Pterostichus dimidiatus, Erichson, Kafer, 68. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 69. Head and thorax more or less coppery, elytra rich green, sometimes black. Head with two deep striae in front and other- wise wrinkled, eyes large and rather prominent, palpi and antennae black, two joints at the base of the latter reddish beneath with a black line above. Thorax subquadrate, equally rounded at the sides, so that the width at the base about equals that of the anterior margin, posterior angles not quite rectangular, the disk all over transversely wrinkled, the dorsal furrow in front termi- nating in an elevated space, behind which there is a correspond- ing depression, the base rugose, having two longitudinal striae on each side, the exterior one shortest. Elytra rather broader than the thorax, rounded at the shoulders but the sides very slightly rounded or somewhat straight, broadly margined, strongly punc- tate-striated, the third stria with three more deeply impressed punctures ; beneath black, sides of the thorax and of the abdomen in front punctured, legs black. Length 6J lines. It is a much larger insect than cupreus, and cannot be con- founded with it. Like it, it is winged, but the head and eyes are larger, the foveae at the base of the thorax longer, especially the inner one which extends upwards considerably ; the elytra are more oblong and their sides more parallel, the striae con- spicuously punctate, and the two joints at the base of the antennae are red beneath only. It is local, but may be taken abundantly on Hampstead Heath and Wandsworth Common ; and at Folkstone in the spring. It is also found, as recorded by Mr. Stephens, at " Coombe Wood ; Southend and in Norfolk." 3. P. lepidus : apterus, oblongus, plerumque cupreo-vel viridi- aneus, nitidus ; thorace subquadrato, basi profunde bi- striato ; elytris oblongis, striatis, striis obsoletissime punctulatis, punctis tribus impressis ; antennis pedibusque totis nigris. Carabus lepidus, Fab. Mant. 1. 200 (1787).— Fab. S. El. 1. 189. — Payk. Mon. 32(1790). Harpalus lepidus, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 94. CARABID.E. — PTEROSTICHUS. 99 Platysma lepida, Sturm, D. F. 5. 92. Feronia lepida, Dej. Spec. 3. 218 ; Icon. 3. 21. pi. 127. Pcecilus lepidus, Steph. Mand. 1. 108, et Manual, p. 31. — Curtis, Ent. pi. 187. Pterostichus lepidus, Erichson, Kafer, 67. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 70. Wingless, narrower and more oblong than the preceding species, head and thorax brilliant shining greenish copper, purplish or greenish black, elytra also coppery or greenish brass, more rarely greenish or bluish black. Head convex behind, depressed in front of the antenna?, the frontal fovese smaller, and the eyes less prominent than in dimidiatus, mandi- bles, palpi and antennae wholly black. Thorax narrower, more quadrate, more finely margined, more contracted behind, more convex and smooth on the disk, the basal striae more deeply impressed, the base smoother and the posterior angles more rectangular. Elytra oblong, rather contracted in front, sides very slightly rounded, strongly margined, disk rather flattish, moderately and less coarsely striated than in dimidiatus, the stria? so obsoletely punctulated as to be sometimes scarcely per- ceptible, the third with three impressions, interstices flattish ; underside greenish black, sides of the breast and of the abdomen in front finely punctured, legs wholly black. Length 6 lines. Rather a scarce species, but it has been taken sparingly in Norfolk, Devon and Hants; at Ely, Cambridge, Northampton, Hertford and Darenth Wood. It has on more than one occasion been found in some numbers at Charlton sand-pits in the spring, by breaking open the crevices in the rocks, in which they conceal themselves. " Tollcross, near Glasgow." Mr. Hislop. (ABAX, Bonelli.) 4. P. striola : apterus, niger, depressus ; thorace subquadrato, basi utrinque profunde bistriato, angulis posticis rectis ; elytris profunde striatis, interstitiis planiusculis, linea laterali subcarmata. Carabus striola, Fab. S. El. 1. 188. Harpalus striola, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 124. Abax striola, Sturm, D. F. 4. 147. — Steph. Mand. 1. 125, et Manual, p. 35. Feronia striola, Dej. Spec. 3. 378 ; Icon. 3. 151. pi. 148. Pterostichus striola, Erichson, Kafer, 69. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 79. Wingless, broad, depressed, shining black. Head with an oblong fovea on each side between the eyes, and some elevated lines between them and the fovea3 ; antennae with three joints 100 CARABIDvE. PTEROSTICHUS. at the base black and glabrous, the remainder fuscous and pubescent. Thorax subquadrate, narrowed in front, but nearly straight from about the middle to the hinder angles, which are right angles, the lateral margins incrassated, disk very strigose, with a strong dorsal furrow and two elongate very deeply impressed striae on each side at the base. Elytra ovate, very broad, the breadth being slightly greater than that of the base of the thorax, humeral angles prominent, sides very slightly widest behind the middle, apex broadly rounded with the apical margin itself very slightly sinuated, deeply striated, having an elevated keel-shaped longitudinal ridge extending from the shoulders to about the middle of the seventh interstice, where it disappears, several of the interstices next the suture being elevated also at the extremity; legs incrassated, pitchy black, tibiae and tarsi with red cilia. Length 8-9 lines. Very common. (PTEROSTICHUS, Bonelli.} 5. P. niger: oblongus, niger, subnitidus ; thorace quadrato, pos- tice utrinque leviter impresso bistriatoque, angulis posticis rectis ; elytris profunde striatis, punctis tribus impressis. Carabus niger, 111. Kaler, 1. 182.— Fab. S. El. 1. 178. Harpalus niger, Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 86. Feronia nigra, Dej. Spec. 3. 337; Icon. 3. 108. pi. 142. Platysma nigra, Steph. Mand. 1. 124, et Manual, p. 35. Pterostichus niger, Erichson, Kafer, 70. — Heer, Faun. Helv. 81. Oblong, black, slightly shining. Head with the usual fovese between the antennae, the latter with three joints at the base black and glabrous, the remainder fuscous and pubescent. Thorax quadrate, finely margined and the margins reflexed, slightly narrowed behind, posterior angles right angles, disk much wrinkled, depressed, with a deep dorsal furrow, base with a double impressed stria on each side. Elytra oblong, narrowest in front, dilated behind the middle, deeply striated, the striae obsoletely punctate-crenate. S with an elevated oblong tubercle on the last segment of the abdomen. Length 8-10 lines. Common. 6. P. pammpunctatus : apterus, niger, nitidus ; thorace qua- drato, postice angiLstato, basi utrinque profunde striato ; elytris oblongo-ovatis, profunde striatis, interstitio tertio punctis tribus impressis. Mas. abdominis segmento ultimo lineola acute elevata. CARABTD^E. — PTEROSTICHUS. 101 Germar, Spec. Nov. 19. 31 (1824).— Steph. Manual, p. 35.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 72. Feronia parumpunctata, Dej. Spec. 3. 342; Icon. 3. 112. pi. 142. Pterostichus brunnipes, Steph. Mand. 1. 121. Wingless, shining black. Head with two transverse striae in front and a slight fovea on each side behind them, apex of the palpi and of the antennse ferruginous red. Thorax quadrate, anterior angles prominent, sides rounded and dilated in front, much narrowed behind, the margins reflexed, the hinder angles rectangular with their apex slightly obtuse, disk with a very deeply impressed dorsal furrow and a profound stria on each side at the base, exterior to which is a small ovate impression close to the angle. Elytra oblong-ovate, shoulders rounded, deeply striated, interstices rather coarsely elevated, with three impressions on the third ; $ with a longitudinal acutely-elevated ridge on the last segment of the abdomen. Length 7-8 lines. " Local, but abundant at Newcastle, Benwell, Ouseburn Dene, Long Benton, Dunston, Ravensworth, Gateshead Fell, &c.," in spring and autumn. Hardy and Bold's Catalogue. (PLATYSMA, Bonelli.) 7. P. oblongo-punctatus : alatus, obscure seneus ; thorace quadrato, postice angustato, basi utrinque unistriato, an- gulis posticis acutiusculis ; elytris ovatis, striatis, foveolis quinque impressis ; palpis, tibiis tarsisque rufo-piceis. Carabus oblongo-punctatus, Fab. Mant. 1. 202 (1787) — Fab. S. El. 1. 183.— Payk. Mon. 55 (1790). Harpalus oblongo-punctatus., Gyll. Ins. Suec. 2. 85. Platysma oblongo-punctata, Sturm, D. F. 5. 51. Feronia oblongo-punctata, Dej. Spec. 3. 316; Icon. 3. 99. pi. 140. Pterostichus oblongo-punctatus, Steph. Mand. 1. 122, et Manual, p. 35.— Erichson, Kafer, 76.— Heer, Faun. Helv. 71. Winged, obscure brassy black. Head smooth and shining, with a faintly impressed fovea on each side in front connected by a transverse stria, antennse black, palpi red. Thorax quadrate, the length being fully equal to the breadth in front, the anterior margin curved inwards in the middle considerably, so that the anterior angles are very prominent, sides rounded from the angles to behind the middle, then much contracted till just before the posterior angles, before which they become produced, so as to form, with the base, a little acute angle, the base itself being nearly straight, disk transversely wrinkled, dorsal furrow abbreviated in front and terminating in a curved stria, rather deeper behind just before it reaches the base, the latter much 102 CARABlD^l. PTEROSTICHUS. depressed, punctured on each side, and with a large punctured fovea terminating in an oblong stria about midway between the dorsal furrow and the exterior margin. Elytra broad, short, widest behind the middle, apex considerably narrowed, moderately striated, having from three to five large impressions irregularly disposed on or near the third interstice ; beneath black, femora pitchy, tibiae and tarsi reddish. Length 5|-6 lines. At first sight this species appears to resemble Orinomus, but its characters are wholly dissimilar. The thorax is much longer and therefore more quadrate, the base more truncate, the pos- terior angles less elevated and more acute, the base more depressed and the basal impression extends more considerably upwards ; the form and sculpture of the elytra also are equally dissimilar. Local. Bagley Wood, Oxon ; Harleston Woods, near North- ampton, under chips of pine bark in abundance; Windsor; Devonshire, &c. Found also in Ireland. (ADELOSIA, Stephens.} 8. P. picimanus : alatus, nigro-piceus, depressus ; thorace cor- dato,postice coarctato, utrinque unistriato ; elytris oblongis, subparallelis, punctato-striatis, punctis tribus impressis, antennis pedibusque rufis. Carabus picimanus, Dufts. Faun. 2. 159. Platysma picimana, Sturm, D. F. 5. 48. Feronia picimana, Dej. Spec. 3. 310 ; Icon. 3. 87. pi. 138. Pterostichus macer, Steph. Mand. 1. 123. Adelosia picea, Steph. Manual, p. 35. Winged, depressed, pitchy black or pitchy red, shining. Head large, with a slight fovea on each side between the antennae, three joints of the latter smooth, the upper ones fuscous and pubescent. Thorax cordate, much contracted behind, but the posterior angles rectangular, often rusty red, the dorsal furrow strongly impressed, the base with two oblong smooth striae. Elytra oblong, the shoulders rounded, the sides almost parallel, but a little waved before the middle, rounded and not narrowed at the apex, disk rather depressed, finely punctate-striated, the third stria with three deep impressions, one before the middle, another a little behind the middle and the third at the extremity ; underside and legs rusty red. Length 6 lines. If piceus be Olivier' s name for this insect, the more generally received one (picimanus) ought to stand, because the former had CARABIDJB. PTEROSTICHUS. 103 previously been employed by Linnseus to represent a different species of Carabus. This is rather a local species. " Hackney Marshes, Battersea Fields, and near Southend ; " " Common on the banks of the Tees," are the localities given by Mr. Stephens. I have found it not very commonly in the Isle of Wight. " Near Dublin by J. Tardy." A. H. Haliday, Esq. (STEROPUS, Megerle.) 9. P. madidus : apterus, niger, nitidus ; thorace subrotundato, postice utrinque foveolato ; elytris ovatis, striatis, puncto postice impressis ; pedibus nigris vel rufis. Mas, abdominis segmento ultimo obtuse dentato. Carabus madidus, Fab. Mant. 1. 199. — Fab. S. El. 1. 181. Platysma madida, Sturm, D. F. 2. 49. pi. 112. Feronia madida, Dej. Spec. 3. 294 ; Icon. 3. 79. pi. 136. Steropus madidus, Steph. Mand. 1. 117, et Manual, p. 33. S. arrogans, Steph. Mand. 5. 376, et Manual, p. 33. Wingless, shining black, sometimes slightly brassy, palpi red, apex of the antenna? testaceous. Thorax quadrate, slightly rounded at the sides and narrowed a little behind, but again rounded at the posterior angles, disk convex, smooth, or slightly wrinkled, the dorsal line strongly impressed, the base with a broad rugged fovea close to each angle. Elytra ovate, convex, striated, the stria? obsoletely punctured, the third interstice with a deep puncture a little before the extremity ; underside black, legs sometimes black, sometimes entirely red ; last segment of the abdomen in the i«?a, 130 pumilus, 152 pelidnum, 92-94 plebeia, 124 vernalis, 152 piceum, 90 similata, 118 picipes, 92 spinipes, 129 ACUPALPUS, 163 plicicolle, 88 spreta, 1 19 cognatus, 163 collaris, 164 pullum, 90 pusillum, 90 strenua, 124 subcenea, 125 consputus, 157 dor salts, 158 exiguus, 161 harpalinus, 164 luridus, 161 4-puncfatum, 90, 95 rotundatum, 96 scitulum, 91 6-punctatum, 85 Simpsoni, 90 tibialis, 123 tricuspidata, 124 trivialis, 117 Vectensis, 124 viridis, 123 meridianus, 159 nigriceps, 160 strialum, 90 Thoreyi, 94 vulgaris, 120 Zabroides, 127 placidus, 162 similis, 165 versutum, 89 viduum, 88 AMBLYCHUS, 60 ADELOSIA, 102 jozcea, 102 vivale, 80 Amara 116 bipustulatus, 60 peltatus, 61 acuminata, 118 AMPHYGINUS, 74 Aepys, no fulvescens, 171 marinus, 171 cerata, 119 apricaria, 128 fl^ra, 119 aulica 130 piceus, 74 Anchomenus, 81 Robinii, 171 fo/rows, 126 albipes, 84 AETOPHORUS, 6 brunnea, 126 angusticollis, 82 communis, 121 atratus, 89 imperialis, 6 consularis, 127 dorsalis, 83 AGONUM, 84 convexior, 120 convexiuscula, 130 fulgens, 87 fuliginosus, 90 o#ine, 93 cursor, 122 gracilis, 91 c/rwm, 89 curta, 119, 121 junceus, 81 atratum, 89, 91 discrepans, 126 laevis, 87 Austriacum, 86 erythropa, 123 livens, 82 bipunctatum, 82 eurynota, 119 lunatus, 68 consimile, 91 familiaris, 122 marginatus, 84 cupratum, 95 fulva, 129 memnonius, 82 - cursitor, 92 gemina, 123 micans, 92 emarginatum, 89 m/ma, 123 modestus, 86 fulgens, 87 ingenua, 117, 125 mcestus, 89 fuliginosum, 90 /#ws, 122 oblongus, 84 fuscipenne, 90 fata, 125 pallipes, 83 gracile, 90, 91 laticollis, 120 parumpunctatm, 88 tevp, 89 lucida, 122 pelidnus, 93 livens, 82 mVufri, 124 piceus, 92 218 INDEX. prasinus, 83 doris, 203 micros 166 4-punctatus, 95 scitulus, 91 ephippium, 197 fasciolatum, 191 pallidus, 168 poludosus 167 6-punctatus, 85 Thoreyi, 94 viduus, 88 femoratum, 181 flammulatum, 193 flavipes, 211 rubens, 166 unifasciatus, 166 Anisodactylus, 131 binotatus, 131 fluviatile, 184 fumigatum, 197 fuscicorne, 189 BLETHISA, 53 multipunctata, 53 poeciloides, 131 virens, 131 ARGUTOR, 108 anthr acinus, 108 depressus, 112 diligens, 111 gilvipes, 201 guttula, 180 lampros, 200 laterale, 175-206 Leachii, 175 littorale, 184 lunatum, 185 Brachinus, 19 crepitans, 20 explodens, 20 glabratus, 20 immaculicornis, 20 sclopeta, 20 erythropus, 110 in&qualis, 110 inquinatus, 109 interstinctus, 110 longicollis, 110 pullus, 111 rufomarginatus, 109 Mannerheimii, 202 marinum, 180 monticulum, 189 nitidulum, 190 uormannum, 204 obliquum, 195 obscurum, 182 Bradycellus, 162 cognatus, 163 collaris, 164 fulvus, 163 placidus, 162 similis, 165 strenuus, 111 vemalis, 109 obsoletum, 186 obtusum, 177 BRADYTUS, 127 olivaceum, 192 apricarius, 128 ATTELABUS, 5 pallidipenne, 198-209 consularis, 128 melanurus, 5 pallipes, 211 paludosum, 210 crassus, 128 ferrugineus, 129 Badister, 59 prasinum, 192 pumilio, 178 fulvus, 129 marginatus, 127 bipustulatus, 60 punctatulum, 208 torridus, 128 cephalotes, 60 pusillum, 202 humeralis, 61 4-guttatum, 205 Broscus, us lacertosus, 60 microcephalus, 60 4-maculatum, 207 5-striatum, 177 cephalotes, 114 peltatus, 61 rufescens, 178 BUPRESTIS, 116 sodalis, 62 suturalis, 60 rufipes, 188-190 rupestre, 184-196 bicolor, 83 unipustulatus, 60 saxatile, 185 piger, 116 Bembidium, 174 Schuppelii, 201 scutellare, 175 Calathus, 74 aeneum, 180 secale, 170 apicalis, 77 aerosum, 208 Stomoides, 188 Cisteloides, 75 affine, 190 striatum, 208 crocopus, 76 o/fo>e«, 188 sulcatulum, 174 flavipes, 76 Andrea, 184-209 testaceum, 186 fulvipes, 76 areolatum, 173 tibiale, 191 fuscus, 76 articulatum, 205 tricolor, 187 glabripennis, 78 assimile, 198 undulatum, 193 melanocephalus, 77 biguttatum, 179 ustulatum, 194 microcephalus, 78 bipunctatum, 207 varium, 194-196 micropterus, 78 bistriatum, 176 velox, 208 nollis, 77 Bruxellense, 182 velox, 200 nubigena, 79 callosum, 206 vulneratum, 179 ochropterus, 77 celere, 200 chlorophanum, 208 Blemus, 172 )iceus, 74 rotundicollis, 74 Clarkii, 199 areolatus, 173 'ufangulus, 76 concinnura, 18*3 discus, 166 decorum, 187 apidosus, 168 Callistus, 68 Dejeanii, 197 ongicornis, 167 iinatus, 68 INDEX. 219 Calosoma, 41 ecorus, 187 epressus, 62-148 meridianus, 159 micropterus, 78 inquisitor, 42 Sycophanta, 42 dimidiatus, 98 discoideus, 145 micros, 166 minutus, 169 'iscus, 165 mwstus, 89 Carabus, 34 ?om, 203 mo«zs, 77 acuminatus, 118 dorsalis, 83, 1 58 monilis, 35 ceneus, 140 dorsiger, 62 multipunctatus, 53 jftthiops, 103 phippium, 198 nemoralis, 41 afer, 89 rythropus, 110 m^er, 100 agilis, 8 eurynotus, 118 nigricornis, 66 agrorum, 67 exasperatus, 39 nt^rsYa, 107 albipes, 84 excavatus, 72 nigropiceus, 174 angusticollis, 82 familiaris, 122 nitens, 39 anthracinus, 107 fasciatus, 11 nitidulus. 190 anxius, 151 fasciolatus, 24 tiivafo, 48 apricarius, 128 femoralis, 13 oblongo-punctatus, 101 arenarius, 46 fenestratus, 8 oblongus, 84 areolatus, 173 ferrugineus, 45 obscurus, 134 articulatus, 205 flavipes, 76 obsoletus, 118 arvensis, 36 foraminulosus, 137 ochropterus, 77 aterrimus, 104 frigidus, 75 oricalcicus, 126 atratus, 89 fuliginosus, 90 owa^», 117 atricapillus, 6 fulvipes, 146 pallipes, 83 aulicus, 130 /Mfews, 129 varumpunctatus, 88 auratus, 38 fuscus, 76 patricius, 127 Austriacus, 86 germanus, 132 pelidnus, 92-93 axillaris, 22 ^iAAiw, 116 peltatus, 61 azureus, 134 glabratus, 40 PefjtfK, 145 Azcofor, 129 granulatus, 37 piceus, 74-92 biguttatus, 179 gut tula, 180 picimanus, 102 binotatus, 131 heemorrhoidalis, 18 picipennis, 152 bipunctatus, 207 Helopioides, 64 picipes, 92 bipustulatus, 60 holosericeus, 64 pilicornis, 58 borealis, 49 honestus, 141 planus, 74 brevicollis, 48 hortensis, 41 prasinus, 83 cancellatus, 37 humeralis, 22 preeustus, 45 cassidens, 62 ignavus, 141 pubescens, 138 catenulatus, 35 incequalis, 110 pumicatus, 113 cefer, 200 ingenuus, 125 punctatulus, 135 cephalotes, 114 inquisitor, 42 puncticollis, 137 chalceus, 70 intricatus, 34 purpurascens, 39 chlorocephalus, 19 junceus, 82 ±-guttatus, 206 chlorophanus, 134 /#MS, 87 4-maculatus, 9 Cisteloides, 75 lampros, 200 4-notatus, 10 clathratus, 38 lateralis, 47 ^-punctatus, 95 collaris, 25, 164 lepidus, 98 4-striatus, 169 complanatus, 46 leucophthalmus, 74 rotunda tus, 96 consitus, 35 limbatus, 146 rotundicollis, 96 consputus, 157 linearis, 8 rubens, 167 consularls, 128 littoralis, 47, 70, 184 rubripes, 147 convexiusculus, 130 lividus, 126 rufangulus, 76 convexus, 40 longicollis, 110 rufescens, 45 cordatus, 137 lucidus, 123 ruficollis, 112 crepitans, 20 lunatus, 68 ruficornis, 140 emr major, 58 luteicornis, 143 rufipes, 76 crw^r minor, 17 madidus, 103 rufimanus, 149 cuniculinus, 142 marginatus, 85 sabulicola, 133 cupreus, 97 melampus, 148 sabulosus, 47 cyaneus, 34 melanarius, 106 Scalesii, 110 cyanocephalus, 18 melanocephalus, 77 Sclopeta, 20 220 INDEX. secalis, 170 serripes, 150 b-punctatus, 85 sigma, 11 Silphoides, 63 riparia, 2 rupestris, 196 sylvatica, 1 sylvicola, 2 angustatus, 13 bipennifer, 11 bipunctatus, 15 fasciatus, 12 spinibarbis, 43 spinilabris, 45 CILLENUM, 175 femoralis, 13 fenestratus, 8 spinipes, 130 strenuus, 111 striola, 99 laterale, 176 minimum, 24 foveolus, 14 glabratus, 13 imperialis, 6 subcyaneus, 73 sulcicollis, 64 CILLENUS, 175 impunctatus, 15- linearis, 8 Sycophanta, 42 lateralis, 1 75 longiceps, 7 tardus, 149 maurus, 13 tempestivus, 169 terricola, 73 Clivina, 24 melanocephalus, 12 meridionalis, 8 Teutonus, 154 nz, 30 unipunctatus, 7 vespertinus, 155 nitida, 26 vestitus, 67 obscura, 29 Drypta,4 viduus, 88 violaceus, 39 polita, 27 thoracica, 30 emarginata, 4 viridanus, 83 viridis, 123 CURTONOTUS, 129 Dyschirius, 25 vivalis, 80 vulgaris, 120 Ziegleri, 155 oonvexiusculus, 130 -/««?«», 130 aeneus, 31 aratus, 31 arenosus, 26, 30 CELIA., 125 Cychrus, 33 cylindricus, 27 digit atus, 26 CEPHALOTKS, 114 rostratus, 33 fulvipes, 26 gibbus, 33 vulgaris, 114 CYMINDIS, 21 globosus, 32 jejunus, 31 Chlaenius, 64 basalts, 23 impunctipennis, 29 agrorum, 67 fulgidus, 66 holosericeus, 65 melanocomis, 66 homagrica, 22 inermis, 26 humeralis, 21 minimus, 33 punctata, 23 nitidus, 26 obscurus, 29 Y1-. i . r>nlifno OT nigricornis, 66 sulcicollis, 64 vestitus, 67 xanthopm, 66 j Demetnas, 5 ^ atricapilla, 6 rtonyatula, 6 i mperialis, 6 s mnctatus, 28 msillus, 31 "ufipes, 28 alinus, 28 Cicindela, 1 « nonostigma, 7 t obscura, 6 / horacicus, 30 m/M, 31 aprica, 2 l mipunctata, 7 aquatica, 54 campestris, 3 ,ftavipes, 211 Diachromus, 132 Elaphrus, so quaticus, 54 germanica, 3 8 ermanus, 132 * 'guttatus, 56 Iiybrida, 2 4 'striatus, 17fi marina, 171 Dromius, 7 C1 jpreus, 51 maritima, 3 a 'corws, 187 /^ 0m, 203 INDEX. 221 flavipes, 211 atricornis, 144 marginellus, 147 fumigatus, 197 Lapponicus, 51 lunatus, 185 atrocaeruleus, 141 attenuates, 143 aulicus, 129 melampus, 148 * melanarius, 106 melancholicus, 150 multipunctatus, 53 azurescens, 147 melanocephalus, 77 pallidipennis, 209 azureus, 134, 147 meridianus, 159 pallipes,2ll bifrons, 126 micropterus, 78 paludosus, 210 binotatus, 131 minor, 108 palustris, 54 brevicollis, 138 neglectus, 152 prasinus, 192 brunneus, 126 m#er, 100 pumilio, 178 Ca/er, 145 nigricornis, 144 4-guttatus, 206 calceatus, 131 nigripes, 151 4-maculatus, 207 cephalotes, 114 nigrocaeruleus, 147 riparius, 52 chlorophanus, 135 nitidus, 141 rupestris, 196 chloropterus, 147 notatus, 141 semipunctatus, 56 Cisteloides, 75 oblongo-punctatus, 101 stria tus, 208 cognatus, 163 oblongus, 84 testaceus, 186 collaris, 164-165 obscuricornis, 141 tibialis, 191 communis, 121 obscurus, 134 uliginosus, 50 confusus, 140 obsoletus, 139 consent aneus, 143 parumpunctatus, 88 EPAPHIUS,170 cor acinus, 151 pelidnus, 93 secalis, 170 cordatus, 136 cribellum, 138 perplexus, 145 Pe*t#K, 147 FERONIA 103 cuniculinus, 142 picipes, 92 jEthiops, 103 anthracina, 107 aterrima, 104 cupreus, 148 cupreus. 97 depressus, 148 discoideus, 145 picilabris, 143 picipennis, 153 jt?(?er, 151, 152 placidus, 162 cuprea, 97 depressa, 112 dimidiata, 98 gracilis, 108 dor salts, 158 emarginatus, 89 familiaris, 122 femoralis, 151 plebeius, 124 prasinus, 83 poeciloides, 131 pubescens, 138 lepida, 99 madida, 103 melanaria, 106 wmor, 108 negligens, 110 flaviventris, 151 foraminulosus, 137 f uliginosus, 149 fulvipes, 146 fulvipes, 76 pullus, 111 pumicatus, 113 punctatulus, 135 puncticollis, 137 punc tiger, 147 nigra, 100 nigrita, 106 oblongo-punctata, 101 parumpunctata, 101 fulvus, 129 fuscipalpis, 150 fuscus, 76 germanus, 132 pygmoeus, 110 4-punctatus, 95 rotundatns, 96 rubripes, 147 picimana, 102 jtm/ta, 111 strenua, 110 gib bus, 116 gracilis, 91 Helopioides, 64 ruficeps, 146 ruficornis, 139 rufimanus, 149 s trio la, 99 vernalis, 109 holosericeus, 65 honestus, 141 ruftpalpis, 141 ruftpes, 72 GALERITA, 24 ignavus, 147 rufit arsis, 131 fasciolata, 24 ingenuus, 125 lateralis, 146 rupicola, 136 sabulicola, 133 Harpalus, 33 totas, 128, 149 lentus, 147 semiviolaceus, 148 serripes, 150 acuminatus, 118, 146 lepidus, 98 servus, 143 aeneus, 140 leucophthalmus, 74 6-punctatus, 85 albipes, 84 limbatus, 146 similatus, 118 angusticollis, 82 livens, 82 strenuus, 110 annulicornis, 141 luridipennis, 69 striola, 99 anthracinm, 107 luteicornis, 143 stygius, 150 anxius, 151 luteicornis, 151 subcordatus, 137 apricarius, 128 maculicornis, 141 subcyancus, 73 aterrimuft, 104 marginatus, 85 subsinuatus, 147 222 INDEX. sulcicollis, 64 montanus, 44 castanopterus, 198 sulphuripes, 141 nigricans, 43 ephippium, 198 tardus, 149 rufescens, 45 fumigatus, 196 tenebrosus, 150 spinibarbis, 43 nebulosus, 194 thoracicus, 148 spinilabris, 45 obliquus, 194 trivialis, 119 terminatus, 45 stictus, 197 vaporariorum, 154 vernalis, 109, 152 LEJA, 200 undulatus, 193 ustulatus, 194 VGstitus 67 viduus, 88 Licinus, 62 Notiophilus, 53 vulgaris, 120 Wetterhallii, 153 Wollastoni, 144 depressus, 62 Silphoides, 63 aquaticus, 54 biguttatus, 56 brevicollis, 54 LIONYCHUS, 15 HELOBIA 47 ^ quadrillum, 15 latior, 54 (Rthiops, 48 latus, 56 brevicollis, 47 LOPHA, 203 metallicus, 54 Gyllenhalii, 48 /a/a, 48 Marshallana, 48 nivalis, 48 varicornis, 48 assimilis, 204 CfarJh't, 199 Dom, 198 hcemorrhoidalis, 204 Newmanii, 54 nitidus, 56 palustris, 54 4-punctatus, 57 rufipes, 55 LAMPRIAS, 18 nt^rfl, 202 semipunctatus, 55 striatus, 56 chlorocephalus, 18 cyanocephalus, 19 nigritarsis, 13 pcecila, 205 pulchella, 200 pulicaria, 202 pusilla, 204 substriatus, 56 tibialis, 54 OCYDROMUS, 193 yufij}€S) iy Lebia, 16 fl^zYw, 8 4-guttata, 206 4-maculata, 207 Spentii, 198 flammulatus, 193 OCYS, 177 atricapilla, 6 Loricera, 57 currens, 178 cblorocephala, 19 crux minor, 17 pilicornis, 58 melanocephalus, 178 tempestivus, 178 cyanocephala, 18 fasciata, 12 foveola, 14 glabrata, 13 hsemorrhoidalis, 18 Lymnseum, 173 areolatum, 173 depressum, 173 nigro-piceum, 174 Odacantha, 5 melanura, 5 ODONTONYX, 96 homagrica, 22 humeralis, 21 Masorens, 153 rotundicollis, 96 linearis, 8 obscuroguttata, 14 punctatella, 14 quadrillum, 15 luxatus, 153 Wetterhallii, 153 Miscodera, us Olisthopus, 95 rotundatus, 95 OMASEUS, 104 4-maculata, 9 arctica, 115 a^fnw, 106 \-notata, 10 ant hr acinus, 107 truncatella, 13 Nebria, 46 aterrimus, 104 turcica, 17 arenaria, 46 Bulwerii, 105 borealis, 49 IcBvigatus, 108 LEIOCHITON, 115 brevicollis, 47 melanarius, 106 arcticum, 115 complanata, 46 nigrita, 107 Readii, 115 lateralis, 47 Orinomum, 105 livida, 47 rotundicollis, 108 Leistus, 43 multipunctata, 53 ruftfemoratus. 107 caeruleus, 43 nivalis, 48 sulcatus, 106 ferr^gineus, 45 sabulosa, 47 tetricus, 108 fulvibarbis, 44 indentatus, 44 NOTAPHUS, 193 Oodes, 63 Janus, 44 lifasciatus, 194 Helopioides, 64 INDEX. 223 OPHONUS, 133 biguttatus, 179 macer, 102 azureus, 134 cribellum, 138 foraminulosus, 137 germanus, 132 niiidulus, 135 obscurus, 134 obsolefus, 139 pubescens, 139 punctatissimus, 137 punctatulus, 135 fuscipes, 179 guttula, 180 hcemorrhous, 181 subfenestratus, 179 PLATYDERUS, 112 ruficollis, 112 PLATYNUS, 81 angusticollis, 82 madidus, 103 melanarius, 106 minor, 108 niger, 100 nigrita, 106 oblongo-punctatus, 101 Oririomus, 105 parumpunctatus, 100 picimanus, 102 ruficollis, 112 strcimus 111 puncticeps, 137 puncticollis, 138 sabulicola, 133 PLATYSMA, 101 aterrima, 104 striola, 99 vernalis, 109 stictus, 134 crenata, 109 SCARITES, 25 subpunctatus, 138 cuprea, 97 arenarius, 25 Panagaeus, 58 dimidiata, ya fejozWa, 99 arcticus, 115 fossor, 25 CTM.T, 58 littoralis, 70 gibbus, 32 crux major, 58 madida, 103 globosus, 32 4-pustulatus, 59 nigra, 100 oblongo-punctata, 101 thoracicus, 30 Patrobus, 71 alpinus, 72 picimana, 102 rufipes, 72 versicolor, 97 Sphodrus, 73 leucophthalmus, 74 excavatus, 72 planus, 74 rufipes, 72 PCECTLUS, 97 subcyaneus, 74 septentrionis, 72 cupreus, 97 Stenolophus, 154 PELOPHILA, 49 borealis, 49 dimidiatus, 97 lepidus, 98 versicolor, 97 consputus, 157 derelictus, 159 dorsalis, 158 PERCOSIA, 127 Pogonus, 69 elegaus, 156 exiguus, 161 PERYPHUS, 181 (Eruginosus, 70 flavicollis, 160 o#ftii«, 191 Burrellii, 69 luridus, 160 a^i/fe, 189 chalceus, 70 meridianus, 159 albipes, 187 halophilus, 70 Skrimshiranus, 155 atrocaruleus, 191 littoralis, 70 Teutonus, 154 cnemerythrus, 191 luridipennis, 69 vaporariorum, 154 concinnus, 183 d(?Q(ms, 1 84 Polystichus, 24 vespertinus, 155 femoratus, 181 fasciolatus, 24 STEROPUS, 103 Leachii, 192 vittatus, 24 athiops, 103 littoralis, 184 lunatus, 185 Pristonychus, 73 arrogans, 103 cognatus, 104 maritimus, 181 subci/aneus, 73 concinnus, 104 monticulus, 189 Terricola, 73 madidus, 103 neglectus, 187 nitidulus, 190 Pterostichus, 96 Stomis, 113 olivaceus, 192 .Ethiops, 103 pumicatus, 113 rufipes, 191 anthracinus, 107 saxatilis, 186 tetraspilotus, 184 aterrimus, 104 brunnipes, 101 Synuchus, 80 vivalis, 80 Itfsafo, 191 cupreus, 97 ustus, 185 dimidiatus, 97 TACHIS, 178 viridi-aeneus, 187 PHILOCTHUS, 179 erythropus, 110 gracilis, 107 inaequalis, 110 rufescens, 178 TACHYPUS, 200 oeneus, 180 lepidus, 98 acutus, 200 224 INDEX. andrea, 209 bipunctatus, 207 celer, 200 chalceus, 200 chlorophanus, 208 orichalcicm, 200 pallidipennis, 209 properans, 200 striatus, 208 TACHYS, 175 binotatus, 181 gracilis, 177 immunis, 177 maritimus, 176 minutissirmis, 176 obtusus, 177 pusillus,l77 scutellaris, 176 vittatus, 181 TAPHRIA, 80 vivalis, 80 Tarus, 21 angularis, 22 axillaris, 22 ta?, 23 coadnutus, 22 homagricus, 22 humeralis, 21 Itevigatus, 22 macularis, 22 vaporariorum, 23 TENEBRIO, 25 fossor, 25 rostratus, 33 Trechus, 165 aquations, 169 brunnipes, 164 cognatus, 163 i collaris, 164 consputus, 157 discus, 165 dor sails, 158 flamcollis, 160-161 fulvescens, 171 fulvus, 164 fuscipennis, 169 incilis, 168 lapidosus, 168 Iffivis, 169 laticollis, 153 littoralis, 167 longicornis, 167 meridianus, 159 micros, 166 minutus, 169 mYzWw5, 161 obtusus, 169 pallidus, 164 paludosus, 167 parvulus, 158 placidus, 162 Robinii, 171 rubens, 167 rubens, 169 ruficollis, 165 scutellaris, 176 secalis, 170 suturalis, 159 , 169 TRIMORPHUS, 61 confinis, 62 £"rro, 61 scapularis, 62 Zabrus, H5 ffibbus, 116 pigef, 116 THE END. 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