49) 44d uae xe i k g's Ate \ ohare i Ae ALA I A h eb RW Pea ye OMAN CREA AC P A Ay asks * “Wiaty ree de Wich OMI Be rier) a . NO et MAE gh “ela nips ' ‘i oaah waaay THA Ye: lat he f He | eae ey 04 Vay Aree + 4s Va TG he el Gay be HY i ATR, aD as oi Wt f sy? i a ee ee +) #3 ne 6) 4) ¥ bs by aa. a ; rs vi ae et Lia Y ae as é An's) ; ae Sy tisietee tect a Wii te iy Bry Rat alte Neo - 4 * 7 hea sian se ie P aheten dt ahstyt? peas ARS Vain se i i : m . om i " i ‘ ay a aati ty ie mn qh ay ban Va : hi chy " at un ae mt vel te Rar nate eeu Sure ae yg " nie $ mi su Haut i, wa A i ae in ee ene f eget i i Tha i! RT era UJ ty ‘ \ Tht >| ‘ cn NH it i rey Lt LN rane ih m4 i ¥tibos Dar i. f AN ‘, P » f Wie aj THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE » ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. THIRD SERIES. VOL. II. fu Ly ON De OrN:; PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY BY C. ROWORTH AND SONS, BELL YARD, FLEET STREET. SOLD AT THE SOCIETY’S APARTMENTS, 12, BEDFORD ROW, AND BY LONGMAN, GREEN, LONGMAN AND ROBERTS, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1864—-1866. LONDON: a PRINTED BY C. ROWORTH AND SONS, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR. ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY. == COUN CIL. 1864, F. P. Pascor, Esq:, F.L.S., &c. .. ate as Aa -- President. Rev. Hamer Cuarx, M.A., F.L.S. -. ae H. T. Stainton, Esq., F.L.S., F.G.S. .. Vice- Presidents. A. R. Wattacz, Esq., F.Z.S., F.R.G.S. A SamvueEt Sievens, Msq., F.L.S. .. a 5c so -» Treasurer. Epwin Sueruerp, Esq. .. A = = v° ts yy: ecretaries. J. W. Durnine, Esq., M.A., F.LS., F.Z.S., fet ae te H. W. Bares, Esq., F.Z.S. or ve oe se Ferpinanp Grout, Esq. .. 2 sie ac we ays R. M‘Lacutan, Esq., F.L.S. he AS So J. W. May, Esa. .. oe Fic Freperick Smitn, Esq. .. ne 5c ae z J. Jenner Wein, Esq. .- ee Other Members of Council. 1865. F. P. Pascog, Esq., F.L.S., &c. .« se se -. President. W. W. Sauwoers, Esq. F.R.S., V.P.L.S., oe ee Se ae Freperick Smita, Esq. .- oe os ee a ar \ Vice- Presidents. H. T. Stainton, Esq., F.L.S., F.G.S. .. ae ae oa Samvet Srevens, Esq., F.L.S. .. AG a Se -. Treasurer. Epwin Sueruerp, Esq. . : a5 Se a) ’ Secretaries. J. W. Dunnine, Esq,, M.A., ELS, P.ZS , &e. Sic a5 Rev. Hamer Crark, M.A., F.L.S. atc s ere es R, M‘Lacuran, Esq. F.L.S.... ae os = ae ) Freperic Moore, Esq. .- te =e Ee ue : wees Members | ’. Avcustus F. Sueprarp, Esq. .. ae Ac of Council. Epwarp Sseprarp, Esq., F.L.S. a ae ae ae J. Jenner Werr, Esq., F.LS. .. oe. ate a Wo, a ’ TRANSACTIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, 1834 —1865. =o To the Public. To Members. Voll a: (24 cplates)-. “«. — Price s£1, (6540) oy. Germ kOe, Wolwml. (22: plates)... <& ead p, tome mO- 8 = oe OmlOamnO Viol. UIT. (16 plates). 0 et i 0) re Oss 0 WoliIV. -(23 plates) ico a ee tl to 0 2 ea OL 0 Wols V2. )(23eplates)i Vo tn. 1. to @» 10) 0 EG OO £410 O SECOND (OR NEW) SERIES. To the Public. To Members. Wolmic= (1s*plates)s*\. 261 34°50 2" ae OU Vol Wie (23 plates) oh. sl Se Oa aa, soe. cel Nol. Wis i(ESaplates)is (2 aiplates)i. st es R20 0 See eee os 210 Vole TI (24 plates). 2 fea) MeO ee O ie sas = a es oS. ag There are also published at this date, Vol. III. Parts 1,2; Vol. IV. Part 1; and Vol. V. Part 1. On The Journal of Proceedings of the Society is bound up with the Trans- actions; it may, however, be obtained separately—by Members gratis, and by the public, price 1s. per sheet. Members and Subscribers resident more than fifteen miles from London, who have paid their subscription for the current year, are entitled to receive the Transactions without further payment, and they will be forwarded free, by post, to any address within the United Kingdom. The Council no longer undertakes to supply the First or Second Series of the Transactions in detached parts or portions of Volumes, All applications for isolated Parts must be made direct to the Secretary. -—_— > Explanation of the Plates . Errata . cae Sg al eS Ine List of Members and Subscribers — MEMOIRS. I, if: ULI. IV. V. \ VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. A Catalogue of Lucanoid Coleoptera; with Illustrations and Descriptions of various new and interesting Species. By Major F. J. S. Parry, F.L.S. ? , l On the Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. By G. R. Warteruousr, F.Z.S., &c. . 115 On the Construction of Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. By F. Smrru, late Pres. Ent. Soc. . 13) On the Reversion and Restoration of the Silkworm. By Captain T. Hutton, F.G.S. . . 143 Descriptions of some New Species of Butterflies found in Southern Africa. By Rotaxp Trimen. 175 Characters of undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). By F. Wacker, F.L.S. = ital Notes on the Genus Hydaticus (Leach), with Descriptions of New Species. By the Rev. H. Crarx, M.A., F.L.S. . . 209 Descriptions of uncharacterized Genera and Species of Phylophaga. By J. S. Baty 223 Descriptions of New Species of Diurnal Lepidoptera. By W.C. Hewirson, F.L.S. ball SoA tae le - . 245 Further Descriptions of New Genera and Species of Phylophaga. By J. S. Baty es 251 Notes on the Genus Schematiza (Phyltophuga, Gallerucide), with Descriptions of New Species. By the Rev. H. Crark, Mra EES: : 259 Descriptions of some New Species of Coleopterous Insects belonging to the Eupodous Phylophuga, ‘Natives of the Old World and Australia. By J. O. Westwoon, M.A., F.L.S., Hopeian Prof. of Zoology 271 vi XIII. CONTENTS. A Monograph of the Genus Yphthima ; with Descriptions of Two New Genera of Diurnal Lepidoptera. By W. C. PAGE Hewirson, F.L.S. 281 XIV. On the Reversion and Restoration of the Silkworm (Part 2) ; with Distinctive Characters of Eighteen Species of Silk- producing Bombycide. By Captain T. Hutton, F.G.S. 295 XV. Descriptions of New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. By J. S. Baty : 333 XVI. On the Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. By H. W. Bates, F.Z.S. ee 359 XVII. New Species of Agra in the Collection of Mr. W. W. Saunders. By H. W. Bates, F.Z.S. . on bea OO XVIII. Descriptions of some New Species of Hymenopterous In- sects belonging to the Families Thynnide, Masaride, and Apide. By F. Smiru, V. P. Ent. Soc. 389 XIX. Descriptions of New Phytophaga from Western Ausiralia. By the Rev. H. Crarx, M.A., F.L.S. . 401 XX. Descriptions of New Species of Bombyces from North Eastern India. By F. Moore. 423 XXI. Descriptions of New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. By J. S. Baty, F:L.S. sistkelre Ss Stee tucl anh XXII. Characters of a New Genus and Species of Chalcidites. By F, Waker, F.L.S. 44] XXIII. Remarks on Captain Hutton’s Paper ‘‘On the Reversion ' and Restoration of the Silkworm.” By Captain J. MIrcHELL pes eCy a oc 288) XXIV. On the British Species of Agathidium. By Davin Suarrp 445 XXV. Observations on some remarkable Varieties of Sterrha sacraria, Linn., with general Notes on Variation in Lepi- doptera. By R. M‘Lacutany, F.L.S.. 458 XXVI. Description of Papilio Godeffroyi, n. sp. By Gro. Semper 469 XXVII. New Genera and Species of Gallerucide. By J.S. Baty, BLS. See muerte rn Lil XXVIII. Descriptions of New Hesperide. By W. C, Hewirson, 6) URS Aye eA ot, YAR 5s cs tie Sen 2 & 479 Journal of Proceedings for 1864 . sie We ape ei ee ete ae i ” 9 LS GO U MEN tre teitee yee ioe Mi sclsait Sel ade: open a RROGL Index elili EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. Puate. Fic. lie . Odontolabis Mouhotii, Parry, g. “e Castelnaudi, Parry, . Ludekingii, Vollenh., g, var. med. + Wollastonii, Parry, @. ” ” ”? g C 55 PA » ,» Var.max. . Sclerostomus signatipennis, H. Deyr., g . “ lineatus, H. Deyr., 9. 5 fasciatus, Germain, ©. - Hexarthrius Deyrollei, Parry, g. « Cladognathus attenuatus, Parry, @. . Neolucanus cingulatus, Parry, 9. . Cladognathus decipiens, Parry, 9. Ps zebra, Oliv., 2. . “gus serratus, Parry, ¢. . Odontolabis Stevensii, J. Thoms., @, var. max. . “gus impressicollis, Parry, g. - Mesotopus Tarandus, Swed., 9. « Odontolabis Stevensii, J. Thoms., 2. . Cladognathus sericeus, Hope, $, var. max. . Lucanus Hopei, Parry, g. . Cladognathus fulvonotatus, Parry, g , var. max. . Odontolabis Sommeri, Parry, g. ee Brookeanus, Vollenh., ¢, var. max. Cyclorasis subnitens, Parry, 3. . Cladognathus Wallacei, Parry, &, var. max. - bisignatus, Parry, 8, var. min. . Leplinopterus Fryi, Parry, %, var. max. . Cladognathus bisignatus, Parry, 9 . if Tragulus, Vollenh., ¢, var. med. . £gus trilobatus, Parry, g. . Leptinopterus rotundatus, Parry, g. . Odontolabis eratus, Hope, 9. IL. ILL. IV. Vi VI. PON FaALsoOneoarwnraArwnekwnmrwne? mr oaoanrnn VILL. = 7ollenhovii, Parry, g , var. max. - Cladognathus flavidus, Parry, g, var. max. rd elegans, Parry, . quadrinodosus, Parry, , var. max, Et Lafertei, Reiche, 2. aAPon > vill Pate. Xe XI. XI. XIII. XIV. Fic. or W& WH OH NAAR Hw HAAS YS EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 1, Neolucanus Baladeva, Hope, mandib. 2. Go ce FOVA OAs > . Qe -agnaxwns OD . e De wo Rhetus Westwoodii, Parry, g, var. max.; fig. 8, antenna. Neolucanus Saundersii, Parry, mandib. Cyclorasis Jekelii, Parry, Hexarthrius Bowringii, Parry, g, var. max.; fig. 7, antenna. Cantharolethrus Luxerii, Buquet, g. Agus platyodon, Parry, ¢, var. max. . Lucanus Smithii, Parry, g. Chiasognathus Mniszechii, J. Thoms., @. Hemisodorcus Passaloides, Hope, g. Cladognathus politus, Parry, 8. Heterochthes brachypterus, Westw., 2 ; hee Odontolabis Cingalensis, Parry, g, var. max. « Macrocrates bucephalus, Burm., ¢. Heterochthes brachypterus, Westw., g, var. max.; and details. » ” », @, Var. min,; and details. iB ” » 3 and details, Cladognathus rudis, Westw., 9; and details, Sclerostomus Philippi, Westw., ¢. Homoderus Mellyi, Parry, g, var. max., anterior part of body. Cladognathus modestus, Parry, g; and details. Pr faber, J. Thoms , g, var. max.; 2a, f, var. min., head. Buddha, Hope, g, var. max.; 3 a, var. min. (C. Thibeticus, Westw.) Cyclommatus Maitlandi, Parry, @, var. max. Agus lubilis, Westw., ¢; and details. - Ditomoderus mirabilis, Parry, #; and details. la. Hornet’s nest in rudimentary state. Four cells of hornet’s nest. A more advanced piece from the same nest. Illustration of the mode of cell-building. Nest of an Icaria. Nest of Icaria guitatipennis. Comb of Vespa vulgaris. Portion of nest of Tatua Morio. Hydaticus Bakewellii, Clark. S Ussherii, Ciark. “ Bowringii, Clark. es decorus, Klug. 5 histrio, Clark. 3 vittatus, Fabr., var. Helcyra Hemina, Hewitson. . Limenitis Labotas, Hewitson. 3 Ligyes, Hewitson. Laogona Lilea, Hewitson. EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 1X Prare. Fic. XVI. 1. Gonepteryx Gobrias, Hewitson. 2. Eteora Eupolis, Hewitson. 3. Eueides Eurysaces, Hewitson. 4, Dircenna Dercyllidas, Hewitson. 5. Lasiommata Lasus, Hewitson. Oka: i ; Leprea, Hewitson. XVII. 1,2. Canyra Hebe, Trimen. 3,4. Xois Sesura, Hewitson. 5. Yphthima Inica, Hewitson. Gaile » Nareda, Kollar. 8, 9. », Aphnius, Godart. 10. » Sepyra, Hewitson. XVIII. NE »» Hyoagriva, Moore. 12. » Paiudocus, Moore. 13. 5, Itonia, Hewitson. 14, 15. », Ceylonica, Hewitson. 165 1.75 5, Loryma, Hewitson. 18. », Sakra, Moore. 19. », Narasingha, Moore. 20, 21. 3 Methora, Hewitson. XIX. 1,2. Larva of Trilocha varians, Moore. .- 3. ne Bombyx fortunatus, Hutton. 4. fp A Huttoni, Westw. oe a y Bengalensis, Hutton. 6. +p Ocinara lactea, Hutton. fle 7 Bombyx Mori, Linn., reverted. 8. ae 3 » as cultivated. XX. 1. Agra occipitalis, Bates, ¢. . ,, tibialis, Chaudoir, 9. . 4, Cytherea, J. Thoms, #. Saundersii, Bates, . », dominula, Bates, 9. 5 anguinea, Bates, g. », Valentina, Bates, 2. . - 2 3 4 5. 6 Ws XXI. 1. Thaumatosoma Duboulaii, Smith, #; la, antenna. 2. Tetralonia mirabilis, Smith, g, antenna. 3 . Lamprocolletes cladocerus, Smith, ¢; 34, 36, antenna. 4, Clenocerus ramosus, Smith, ¢, antenna. 5. Nomia Kirbii, Smith, ¢, antenna. 6. Psammothermu flabellata, Smith, antenna. 7. Chalicodoma celocera, Smith, ¢, antenna. XXII. i. Bombyx Sherwilli, Moore. 2. Saturnia Cidosa, Moore. 3. a Lindia, Moore. ROLE. 1, Sterrha sacraria, Linn., 9, parent of the following. 1b, Larve of S. sacraria ; on Polygonum aviculare. 2—7. Sterrha sacraria, varieties bred from eggs laid by fig. 1. XXIV. 1. Papilio Godeffroyi, Semper, g , upper and under side. 2 os > ”) ” ,’ Oly ” ” ERRATA. TRANSACTIONS. ’ Page 79, line 16 from bottom, insert the habitat ‘* Assam.’ ,, 207, note, add at the end “at p. 370.” JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS. Page xvi, line 4 from bottom, for ‘ Long. corp.” read ‘‘ Long. cap.” A SEXIVITS 735 2,0), 3 for ‘‘ Sybines” read “ Sibynes.” PA Gn, “ag IY 5 for “« Limenitis” read ‘* Leptosia.”’ Plates 1, 2,3, 4, 11 and 12, are erroneously lettered Vol. I. instead of Vol. UL. Hist of PHembers THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY. | OF LONDON. FEBRUARY, 1866. LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. Wonorary Members. Boueman, Carl H., Stockholm. Edwards, Professor H. Milne, Paris. ’ Guérin-Méneville, F. E., Paris. Hagen, Dr. H. A., Konigsberg. Lacordaire, Professor J.'I’., Liége. Leconte, Dr. John L., Philadelphia. Lefebvre, Alexandre, Bouchevilliers, prés Gisors, Département de |’ Eure. Pictet, Professor J. C., Geneva. Zeller, Professor P. C., Meseritz. Zetterstedt, Professor J. W., Ph. D., &e., Lund. (xiii °). ORDINARY MEMBERS AND SUBSCRIBERS. Marked * are Original Members. Marked ¢ have compounded for their Annual Subscriptions. Marked S. are Subscribers. Date of Election. 1866 Adams, Henry, F.L.S., 19, Hanover Villas, Kensington Park, W. 1858 S. Allchin, W.H., M.D., 7, Pembridge Villas, Bayswater, W. 1849 S. Allis, Thomas H., York. 1856 Armitage, Edward, 3, Hall Road, St. John’s Wood, N.W. 1857 Atkinson, W.S., M.A., F.L.S., La Martiniére, Calcutta. = + Babington, Professor C. C., M.A., F.R.S., F.LS., F.G.S., St. John’s College, Cambridge. 1857 Bakewell, R., F.L.S., 96, St. John’s Wood Terrace, N. W. 1850 Baly, J. S., F.L.S., 4, Francis Terrace, Kentish Town, N.W. . Barlow, F., St. Andrew’s Street, Cambridge. 1865 S. Barton, Stephen, Maudlin Street, Bristol. _ foe] _ © 72] 1861 Bates, Henry Walter, F.Z.S., 40, Bartholomew Road, Kentish Town, N.W. 1851 Beaumont, Alfred, Greave, Meltham, Huddersfield. 1865 Beavan, Lieut. R. C., Bengal Revenue Survey. 1854 Birt, Jacob, 30, Sussex Gardens, Hyde Park, W. 1866 S. Blackburn, Thomas, Grassmeade, Southfields, Wandsworth, S.W. 1864 Blackmore, Trovey, 10, High Street, Wandsworth, S.W. 1849 + Bladon, J., Albion House, Pont-y-pool. 1841 Bond, Fred., F.Z.S., 21, Adelaide Road, Haverstock Hill, N.W. 1860 Bonvouloir, Vicomte Henri de, 15, Rue de |’ Université, Paris. 1865 Borrer, W., M.A., F.L.S., Cowfold, Horsham. 1865 Borthwick, Richard, Alloa, N.B. - Bowerbank, J. S., Ph. D., F.R.S., F.G.S., F.L.S., 2, East Ascent, St. Leonards. 1852 + Boyd, Thomas, 17, Clapton Square, N.E. 1856 Braikenridge, Rev. G. W., M.A., F.L.S., Clevedon, near Bristol. 1865 S. Brewer, J.A., High Street, Reigate. 1849 S. Brown, Edwin, Burton-on-Trent. 1862 Browne, Rev. T. H., High Wycombe, Bucks. 1865 S. Brunton, T., Glenarm Castle, Larne, Antrim. 1863 Bryant, George, India Office, Victoria Street, Westminster, S.W. 1855 Burnell, E. H., 32, Bedford Row, W.C. X1V Date of Election. 1860 1865 1859 1850 1865 8. 1865 8S. 1865 1865 1865 S. 1853 1857 1865 1865 aa 1849 8S. 1853 — Cc or _ M ORDINARY MEMBERS AND SUBSCRIBERS. Candéze, Dr. E., Glain, Liege. Carey, A. D., The Paragon, Hackney, N.E. Chaudoir, Baron Maximilien de, Volhynia. Clark, Rev. Hamlet, M.A., F.L.S. j Clarke, C. B., M.A., Calcutta. Clift, Edward, Lewisham, S.E. Cole, W., 123, Hemingford Road, Islington, N. Colquhoun, Hugh, M.D., 16, Grosvenor Terrace, Glasgow. Cooke, Benj., 49, Ardwick Place, Manchester. Cox, Major C. J., Fordwich House, Canterbury. Croker, I. F. Dillon, 19, Pelham Place, Brompton, S.W. Crotch, G. R., B.A., 8, Earl Street, Cambridge. Dallas, W.S., F.L.S., The Museum, York. Darwin, Charles, .M.A., F.R.S., &c., Down, Bromley, S.E. Dawson, John, Carron, Falkirk, Stirlingshire. De Grey and Ripon, Earl, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., 1, Carlton Gardens, S.W. Desvignes, Thomas, Fir Tree Cottage, Woodford, N.E. Devonshire, Duke of, K.G., F.R.S., &c., Piccadilly, W. Dohrn, Dr. C. A., Pres. Ent. Verein, Stettin. Dorville, H., Alphington, Exeter. Dossetor, T. P., 12, Poultry, E.C. Doubleday, Henry, Epping. Dunning, J. W., M.A., F.LS., F.Z.S., Secretary, 1, Old Square, Lincoln’s Inn, W.C. D’Urban, W.S. M., F.L.S., Newport, Exeter. Dutton, James, 2, Theresa Place, Hammersmith, W. Eaton, A. E., Little Bridy, Dorsetshire. Evans, W. F., 7, St. Alban’s Road, Kensington, W. Farren, W., 10, Rose Crescent, Cambridge. Fenning, George, Lloyds, E.C. Fletcher, J. E., Comer Gardens, Worcester. _ Fry, Alexander, F.L.S., 1, Holland Villas Road, Kensington, W. Fust, H. J., Hill Court, Berkeley, Gloucestershire. Gloyne, C, P., Jamaica. Godman, F. D., M.A., F.L.S., Park Hatch, Godalming. Gorham, Rev. H.58., Ilam, Ashbourne. Gould, J., F.R.S., F.L.S., F.Z.S., 26, Charlotte’ Street, Bedford Square, W.C. Gray, John, Wheatfield House, Bolton, Lancashire. Gray, John Edw., Ph. D., F.R.S., British Museum, W.C. Greene, Rev. J., M.A., Cubley Rectory, Uttoxeter. Grenfell, John G., British Museum, W.C. Groser, W. H., B.Sc., F.G.S., 19, Claremont Square, N. Groves, W., 1, Lee Place, Lee, S.E. Grut, Ferdinand, 9, King Street, Southwark, S.E. Guise, Sir W. V., Bart., F.L.S., Elmore Court, Gloucester. Nn ORDINARY MEMBERS AND SUBSCRIBERS, XV Guyon, George, Ventnor, Isle of Wight. Hackshaw, Robert, 29, Merton Road, Kensington, W. Hanson, Samuel, 43, Upper Harley Street, W. Harper, P. H., 30, Cambridge Street, Hyde Park Square, W. Hartwright, J. H., 16a, Terrace, Kennington Park, S. Haward, Alfred, Eagle Cottage, Gloucester Road, Croydon, S. Hewitson, W. C., F.L.S., F.Z.S., Oatlands, Weybridge. Hobson, Captain Julian C,, H.M. Staff Corps, Sattara, near Bombay. Howitt, Godfrey, M.D., Collins Street East, Melbourne. Hudd, A. E., 1, Gloucester Row, Clifton. Hughes, T. E., Wallfield, Reigate. Hume, William, 9, Gracechurch Street, E.C. Hunter, John, Sycamore Grove, New Malden, S.W. Janson, E. W., Librarian, 2, Alma Road, Highgate Hill, N. Jekel, Henri, Paris. Jenyns, Rev.L., M.A., F.L.S., F.G.S., 1, Darlington Place, Bath. John, Evan, Llantrisant, Glamorganshire. Kirby, W. F., 34, St. Paul’s Crescent, Camden Square, N.W. Knox, H. Blake, 2, Ulverton Place, Dalkey, Dublin. Kuper, Rev. C., M.A., Trellich, Chepstow. Lacerda, Antonio de, Bahia. Laing, James A., Paragon Road, Blackheath, S.E. Latham, A. G., Weaste Hall, Pendleton, Manchester. Lea, J. W., B.A., F.G.S., The Grange, Shepperton Green, Chertsey. Lee, John, Q.C., LL.D., F.R.S., &¢., Hartwell House, Aylesbury. Lewis, Rev. Evan, B.A., Rothwell, Northamptonshire. Lier, H. H. H. van de, Delft. Lighton, Rev. SirC. R., Bart., Ellastane, Ashbourne. Lingwood, R.M., M.A., F.L.S., 1, Derby Villas, Cheltenham. Linnell, John, jun. Redstone, Redhill. Llewelyn, J. 1. D., M.A., F.L.S., Ynisygerwn, Neath. Lodder, Major H.C., 47th Infantry, Toronto, Canada West. Logan, R.F., Hawthornbrae, Duddingstone, near Edinburgh. Lowe, W. F., M.D., Balgreen, Slateford, near Edinburgh. Lubbock, Sir John, Bart., F.R.S., F.L.S., F.Z.S., &c., President, High Elms, Farnborough. Lyddeker, Richard, Harpenden Lodge, St. Albans. M‘Caul,8., B.C.L., Rectory House, London Bridge, E.C. M‘Intosh, J., Matfen Hall, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. M‘Lachlan, Robert, F.L.S., 1, Park Road Terrace, Forest Hill, S.E. Marshall, Rev. T. A., M.A., ‘The College, Milford Haven, Marshall, William, Elm Lodge, Clay Hill, Enfield. Mathew, G.F., R.N., F.L.S., Raleigh House, Barnstaple. May, J. W., 9, Victoria Road, Finchley Road, N.W. Meek, Edward, 5, King Street, Old Ford Road, N.E. Mercer, Albert, 24, Hemingford Road, Islington, N. Milnes, Rev. Herbert, Crich, Matlock. XV1 Date of Election. 1853 1859 1861 1849 + 1841 + 1863 S. 1840 + 1865 1854 1860 S. 1862 S. 1852 + 1851 1866 S. 1865 S. 1865 1857S. 1866 1865 S. 1865 1861 S. 1865 1865 1861 1849 1849 * 1865 1865 1857 1864 1862 1847 1851 1852 1865 1853 1863 1850 * 1848 1862 1837 1854 S. 1850 S. +. + + 7 > + ORDINARY MEMBERS AND SUBSCRIBERS. Moore, Frederic, 16, Rochester Terrace, Kentish Town Road, N.W. Mosse, G. Staley, 12, Eldon Road, Kensington, W. Murray, Andrew, F.L.S., 67, Bedford Gardens, Kensington, W. Newman, Edward, F.L.S., F:Z.S., M. Imp. L.C. Acad., 7, York Grove, Queen’s Road, Peckham, S.E. Owen, Richard, M.D., LL.D., F.R.S., F.L.S., F.G.S., British Museum, W.C. Parfitt, Edward, Deven and Exeter Institution, Exeter. Parry, Major F. J. Sidney, F.L.S., 18, Onslow Square, S.W. Parry, Thomas, The Bank, Merthyr. Pascoe, Francis P., F.L.S., 7, Palace Garden Villas, Kensington, W. Pelerin, W. G., 237, Queen’s Road, Dalston, N.E. Phillipps, William, Reigate Lodge, Reigate. Pickersgill, J. C., Hooley House, Coulsdon, Croydon, S. Preston, Rev. fT. A., M.A., The College, Marlborough. Pryer, W.B., Shanghai. Ransome, Robert James, Ipswich. Reeks, Henry, The Manor House, Thruxton, Andover. Robinson, E. W., 48, Harmood Street, Kentish Town, N.W. Rogers, C. O., St. George’s Terrace, Lower Clapton, N.E. Rogers, W., Grove Cottage, Merton Road, Lower Tooting, S. Rooke, Col. Willoughby S., F.L.S., Guards Club, Pall Mall, S.W. Ruspini, F. O., 2, Havelock Villas, Pendleton, Manchester. Rylands, T. G., F.L.S., F.G.S., Heath House, Warrington. Saunders, Edward, Hill Field, Reigate. Saunders, G.S., Hill Field, Reigate, Saunders, 8. S., H.M. Consul-General, Corfu. Saunders, W.F., F.L.S., Hill Field, Reigate. Saunders, W. W., F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., Hill Field, Reigate. Schaufuss, L. W., M. Imp. L. C. Acad., &c., Dresden. Scholfield, R.S., Junior Carlton Club, Waterloo Place, S.W. Sealy, A. F., M.A., India. Semper, Georg, Altona. Sharp, David, 12, St. Vincent St., Edinburgh. Shepherd, Edwin, Secretary, 176, Fleet Street, E.C. Sheppard, Augustus F., Rose Bank, Eltham Road, Lee, S.E. Sheppard, Edward, F.L.S., 18, Durham Villas, Kensington, W. Sichel, Dr. Jules, 50, Rue de la Chaussée d’Antin, Paris. Signoret, Victor, 51, Rue de Seine, Paris. Smith, E. A., 27, Richmond Crescent, Islington, N. Smith, Frederick, 27, Richmond Crescent, Islington, N. Spence, W. B. Stainton, H. T., F.L.S., F.G.S., Mountsfield, Lewisham, S.E. Stevens, John S., 24, Bloomsbury Street, W.C. Stevens, Samuel, F.L.S., Treasurer, 24, Bloomsbury Street, W.C. Thompson, Miss Sophia, Barn Hill, Stamford. Thompson, Thomas, Hull. Date of Election. 1856 1838 1859 1853S, 1859 1854 S. 1849 1854 1862 1850 1858 1863 1850 S. 1850 2 1845 1855 * 1865 1849 1863 1843 1865S. 1862 1866 1865S. ORDINARY MEMBERS AND SUBSCRIBERS. XVil Thomson, James, 23, Rue de |’Université, Paris. Thwaites, G. H. K., Ph. D., F.R.S., F.L.S., Ceylon. Timins, Rev. Douglas C., M.A., Avonholme, Tunbridge Wells. Tompkins, H., 44, Guildford Street, Russell Square, W.C. Trimen, Roland, Colonial Office, Cape Town. Turner, J. A., Pendlebury House, Manchester. Vaughan, P.H., Redland, near Bristol. Wailes, George, Burghfield Grange, Gateshead. Walcott, W. H. L., 11, Vyvyan Terrace, Clifton, Bristol. Walker, Francis, F.L.S., The Avenue, Church End, Finchley, N. Wallace, Alexander, M.D., Beverley House, Colchester. Wallace, Alfred R., F.Z.S. F.R.G.S., 9, St. Mark’s Crescent, Regent's Park, N.W. Ward, 8S. Neville, F.L.S., Coimbatore, Madras. Waring, 8. L., The Oaks, Norwood, S. Waterhouse, G. R., V.P.Z.S., &c., British Museum, W.C. Weir, J. Jenner, F.L.S., 6, Haddo Villas, Blackheath, S.E. Were, R. B., 35, Osborne Terrace, Clapham Road, 8. Westwood, Professor J. O., M.A., F.L.S., &c., Oxford. White, Rev. W. Farren, Stonehouse Vicarage, Gloucestershire. Wilkinson, S. J., 7, Jeffrey’s Square, St. Mary Axe, E.C. Wix, William, Isbells, Reigate. Wollaston, T. Vernon, M.A., F.L.S., 1, Barnepark Terrace, Teign- mouth, Devon. Wood, H. T., The Vicarage, Harrow, N.W. Wormald, Perey C., 6, Brondesbury Terrace, Kilburn, N.W. Wright, E. Perceval, M.A., M.D., F.L.S., &c., 10, Clare Street, Dublin. Young, Morris, 7, Old Sneddon Street, Paisley. ees Mt Laney TRANSACTIONS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. I. A Catalogue of Lucanoid Coleoptera; with Illustrations and Descriptions of various new and interesting Species. By Major F. J. Sipney Parry, F.LS, [Read 7th Sept. 1863, 4th Jan., 4th April, 1864.] Tuat portion of Coleoptera known to Entomologists as the Pectinicornia, and established as such by Dr. Burmeister and Professor Lacordaire, may be formed into two separate divisions, viz. Lucanoidea and Passaloidea. The want of sufficient mate- rial prevents me from submitting any satisfactory observations on the latter division; and I must refer the reader in respect to it to the Monograph of M. Percheron, as also to the several pub- lications of Dr. Burmeister, the Rev. F. W. Hope, Professor Lacordaire, and other Entomologists. I may remark, however, that this division appears to be far from a happy one, confusion and disorganization reigning to a great extent. The numerous new species of exotic Coleoptera that have of late years enriched our collections, resulting from the indefatigable labours of those enterprising travellers, the late lamented Madame Pfeiffer, Count de Castelnau, Messrs. Wallace, Fortune and Bates, the late M. Mouhot and M. Henri Deyrolle, have enabled us to add considerably to our knowledge of this branch of natural history. Descriptions and figures of many new and interesting VOL. II, THIRD SERIES, PART I.—MAY, 1864, @ B 2 Major Parry’s Catalogue species by several well known Entomologists have from time to time appeared in the Transactions of the Entomological Societies of London and of France, and among the descriptions alluded to I am happy to say that the interesting group of the Pectinicornia has not been neglected. Mr. Wilson Saunders has published, with plates, in the 3rd volume of the second series of our Trans- actions, the characters of several new and rare species from China, collected by Mr. Fortune in his travels through the tea districts of that country, previously unexplored in an entomological point of view; my friend Professor Westwood, in the same volume, as well as in subsequent publications of our Society, has also given some excellent figures and descriptions of numerous new and rare species; and I myself have also had the pleasure of recently sub- mitting to the Society descriptions of several interesting novelties. This considerable increase during the last few years to our Lucanoid Coleoptera, coming chiefly from India, China and the Eastern and Australian Archipelagos, as well as the addition to our collections of various other species heretofore considered of extreme rarity, or known only by indifferent descriptions or still more indifferent figures, has enabled the Entomologist to clear up many points with reference to the identity and localities of the Lucanoidea, and has further given him the opportunity of forming a more just and comprehensive view respecting the ‘very im- portant point of species and variety. Great confusion has hitherto existed in the synonymy and nomenclature of the different families; with the view, therefore, to its rectification, a newly revised catalogue would, I feel, prove not unacceptable; and by the encouragement and assistance re- ceived from many entomological friends, I have been induced to undertake the present publication. 1 cannot refrain, whilst upon this point, from expressing my best thanks, especially to Count Mniszech, James Thomson, Esq., Dr. Gray, Professor Westwood, W. Wilson Saunders, Esq., A. R. Wallace, Esq., A. Fry, Esq., and J.C. Bowring, Esq., for having most kindly placed at my disposal the various species required for examination. It would be superfluous here to enumerate all those Ento- mologists, who, either by their descriptions of new genera or of species, have contributed to our knowledge of this interesting group; such descriptions, with the names of the respective authors, will be duly notified in their places in the catalogue, But I think it desirable to allude to those distinguished authors who have more particularly and so conspicuously, by their several publications, advanced our knowledge, with reference more of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 3 especially to its classification and general arrangement; their names, already familiar to the Entomologist, are as follow :— Latreille (Cuvier, Régne Animal, iv. 576). M‘Leay (Hore Entomologice, i. 195). Westwood (Ann. Sci. Nat. Ser. 2, i. 112 (1834); Modern Classification of Insects, i. 185; Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. iv. 271; N.S. iii, 197). Hope (Catalogue of Lucanoid Coleoptera, 1845). Burmeister (Handbuch der Entomologie, v. 305, 1847). Lacordaire (Genera des Coleoptéres, iii. 1). Brullé (Hist. Nat. des Insectes, tom. 3). Leconte (Classification of Coleoptera of North America (Smithsonian Instit.), p. 120). The most important collections of the species of this division are to be found in the cabinets of Count Mniszech and Mr. Thomson at Paris (the latter especially interesting as including the species from the collections of Count Dejean, M. Laferté and M. Reiche), in the British Museum, and in the cabinets of the late Rev. F. W. Hope (so liberally presented to the University of Oxford) and Mr. W. W. Saunders; and, lastly, in my own col- lection, which contains, I believe, the largest number of species ever brought together. With reference to the respective families it is not my intention to propose any very great change in the classification; nevertheless I feel that much in this respect is still required, but it appears to me that the period for such re-organization has not yet arrived, a greater knowledge of species being absolutely requisite for under- taking such a task. Should our collections continue to be en- riched as they have been of recent years, this desirable object might then be successfully undertaken, for I am convinced that it is only by placing before the eye a sufficient series of the insect. to be described (and this is more especially true of the Lucanoid Coleoptera) that a just appreciation of its general form and character can be arrived at. It is vain to expect to ascertain the true characters of a genus until the species shall themselves have been properly established; and the development of species so peculiar in the Lucanoid Coleoptera has but too often given rise to great confusion, specimens having not unfrequently been mistaken by Entomologists as the types of distinct species, and described as such, when in fact they were but varieties of species previously known. As already stated, this, my tribute to the Society, must be considered simply as a rectified catalogue, including notices, descriptions and figures of various new and interesting species: Ba 4 Major Parry’s Catalogue as such I trust it may prove useful. Those Entomologists who wish more particularly to study the sectional characters of the various genera and sub-genera must consult the authors previously alluded to. The general arrangement I have adopted has been based chiefly upon the publications of the Rev. F. W. Hope, Dr. Burmeister, Professors Westwood and Lacordaire, combined with certain alterations which it seemed to me convenient to introduce; but as great difference of opinion exists upon this point, the grouping of the various families can scarcely be yet regarded as definitively settled. Professor Westwood, in his remarks on the sectional characters of the Lucanoid Coleoptera (Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. iv. 273), says, “the number of joints in the club of the antenne at first suggested itself, and indeed it had been already proposed by M‘Leay, asa primary sectional character; but this, in addition to the difficulty of its employment, owing to the greater or less development of the joint preceding the clava, was shown to be inefficient, by separating species which agreed together in their entire habitus.” And I may upon this point further remark, that not only this funiculus, but even the very joints of the clava, are variable; instances occurring (especially in the well-known European species Lucanus cervus) where, in the same individual, the clava is found to be both four and five-jointed. Professor Westwood then refers to the tibial spines as bringing together in the most natural manner the great majority of the species, stating that by the employment of this character the genus Lucanus may be divided into three great groups— 1. Those species with two or three spines on the outside of the posterior and intermediate tibia; this group comprises some of the largest species of the family. 2. Those with only one spine in the middle of the four posterior tibiae in both sexes; comprising the gigantic species of Dorcus from the eastern hemisphere, as well as the small typical Dorci of moderate climes, and the group of £gus, of which no Entomologist has been able to establish suffi- cient characters to separate it from other sections of the Lucanide. 3. An extensive group of species which either possess no spines on the four posterior tibiae, or have one small spine de- veloped in the middle of those tibiz in the @ only. This character again is, I think, very unsatisfactory, these spines being often found very aberrant, and, like the claval joints of the antenna, not always to be relied upon; an arrangement of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 5 based upon it is equally at variance with the natural grouping of species ; for we occasionally find individuals of the same species both with and without their proper complement of spines. Where two species in every respect assimilate to each other except in regard to the spines on the tibia, the absence or presence of these ought not, I think, to separate them. There are two very remarkable characters of this group hitherto but slightly noticed by Entomologists, which, although not avail- able for the purpose of generical or sectional division, are yet, for the purpose of specific determination, of very great interest. I refer to the development of the mandibles and to the punctuation. The extraordinary difference in the development of the mandibles is not easily to be accounted for; under what circumstances the larger insect is provided with small undeveloped mandibles, and a smaller specimen of the same species with those organs fully developed, must always remain a mystery. But of this I feel certain, that the whole character of numerous species varies (with reference to their punctuation) in accordance with the development of the mandibles. When these have obtained their full growth the sculpture of the species has entirely changed, and in fact frequently disappears altogether; and when the development is but small or moderate the sculpture becomes more definite, often resembling that of the females, in which it is almost invariably stronger; in fact, these small undeveloped males approximate so closely to their females that I could name well-known Entomologists who have been even led into the error of describing them as such. Is it possible that these small males may be found upon closer anatomical examination to be neuters? It is a point of great interest, and well worthy of deeper investigation. With these facts before me, I have been much perplexed, and have, therefore, abstained for the present from suggesting any decided characters of those new sections. I feel the necessity of such characters being pointed out, but on this occasion my aim is only to present the student with a revised catalogue of the various species, and although errors will doubtless occur, still I trust that my labour may not prove altogether in vain. Descriptions of New, and Notes on some of the rarer, Species. The descriptions of some of the species hereafter mentioned have already been published in the “ Proceedings of the Ento- mological Society” for December, 1862, with a view to their in- corporation in the present catalogue; to these are joined others of new and rare species, of which several have been lately added to 6 Major Parry’s Catalogue our collections, and most of these are illustrated by figures, Having lately returned from visiting the several collections at Leyden, Amsterdam, Halle, Berlin, Stettin and Paris, I have ascertained some interesting points with reference to the synonymy of certain species, and have acquired the knowledge of others previously unknown to me. I take this opportunity of thanking the gentlemen connected with the museums already alluded to for the great kindness and courtesy they respectively evinced towards me when visiting the collections placed under their charge. CuHIASOGNATHUS LATREILLEI Q, Solier. Reichit $, Thomson. imberbis, Dohrn, MS. I have no doubt as to the identity of the above (already re- ferred to in my Remarks on Mr. Thomson’s Catalogue of Lucanide, Tr. Ent. Soc. 3rd Series, vol. i. p. 444). Although my collection does not contain this species, | have been able to examine speci- mens of it in the collections of Count Mniszech and Herr Dohrn, at the Jardin des Plantes (Solier’s type) and the Leyden Museum ; all of which accord so entirely with the excellent figure in my possession by M. Migneaux, that I have now no hesitation in unit- ing them. Curasocnatuus Mniszecui ¢, Thomson. (Pl. X. fig. 3.) ? Jousselinz, Reiche. Of the identity (although very probable) of these species I am not quite so certain. Single specimens of C. Mniszechii are in the collections of Mr. Thomson, Count Mniszech and M. Ger- main; the unique type specimen of C. Jousselinii is in the collec- tion of M. Jousselin at Versailles. According to a recent com- munication from M. Reiche, the two are to be considered as distinct. CanTHARoLeTHRUS Luxerit ¢, Buquet. (Pl. IX. fig. 6.) Whether this unique species is to be placed with the Chiasog- nathide or the Lucanide is problematical; both Mr. Thomson and Count Mniszech have considered it as belonging to the latter family ; the ¢ being as yet unknown, it is difficult to assign its true position. ‘The second species mentioned by Mr. Thomson in his Catalogue, C. Reichii ¢, was originally described by the Rev. F. W. Hope (Trans. Ent. Soc., vol. iv. p. 182, pl. xiii. fig. 3), and placed with Pholidotus; the two species may possibly here- after prove identical. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 7 Lamprima sumptuosa ¢, Hope, Cat. p. 28. L. supra tota flamimeo-rufescens, punctata; mandibulis valde curvatis, apice nigris, elevatis et auriculatis ; sterni processu apice nigro et suboblique truncato; elytris irregulariter sub- striolatis; tibiis anticis extus 6 vel 7-spinosis; calcare gracili, cultriformi; pedibus 4 posticis gracilibus, tibiis in medio bidentatis ; corpore infra cupreo et ceneo, nitidissimo. Long. corp. (mandib. inclus.) lin. 9. Hab. Swan River. A good species belonging to the second section of Zamprima. A single specimen only in the Hopeian collection at Oxford. Gen. Cotroruon, Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. i., ser. 2, p. 113. The general form of the species of this genus exhibits such a remarkable difference from the insects pertaining to the family Dorcide, in which it has been hitherto located, that after a careful comparison with various genera, more especially with Lamprima and Streptocerus (to which the only two species of the genus Colophon, viz. C. Westwoodii and C. Thunbergii, in the form of the prothorax and of the head as well as in the structure of the mandibles, bear, I think, a somewhat striking resemblance), I have been induced to place it in the same family, Chiasognathide, of which it may be regarded as the African representative. I place it in juxtaposition with Streptocerus, which it further resembles in possessing four joints to the clava of the antenne, and thus affords a connecting link with the Lucanide. Mesoropus Taranpus 2. (PI. V. fig. 4.) Lucanus Turandus $, Swed. in Act. Holm. 1787, iii. 186, tab. vill. fig. 2. M. ebenina nigra, nitidissima; capite subrugoso-punctato, an- tice excavato, bispinoso, postice levi, politissimo ; mandibulis brevibus, trigonis, intus bidentatis ; elytris subovalibus; tibiis extus ut in maribus 3-dentatis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) unc. 1, lin. 6. Hab. Afric. Occ. The female, now for the first time figured, has hitherto been of extreme rarity. The only specimens of that sex with which I am acquainted are in the cabinets of the late Rev. F. W. Hope, Count Mniszech and my own. 8 Major Parry’s Catulogue Lucanus cervus, Linneeus. The earliest figure representing this species with which I am acquainted is to be met with in Gesner’s History of Foor-footed Beasts, Serpents and Insects, published by Edward Topsel, in London, 1658. The description is so quaint that I have deemed it not uninteresting to republish it im extenso. “ Beetles are some greater, some less, the great ones some have horns, others without horns. Those that have horns some are like Hartshorns, other have Buls horns, some have horns in their noses: we shall speak of them all in order. The IlAaruxepwc, or Hartshorn beetle, is called Lucanus by Nigidius ; as Pliny witnesseth. Some call it the Bull, others the Flying Stag: Hesychius cals it axayoc, because it lays hold on things in its way with thorny horns. Cardanus calls it cxcapafedagoc, a word composed of Greek and Latin; Gaza calls it kapafoc; the Italians call it Cereti, and vulgarly Polupeso; the French, Cerf volant; the English, Stag fly or Flying fly; the Hollander, Fliegende Hert; the Ilyrians, Gelui; the Poles and Sclavonians, Krowha Wielk. “ Amongst all the horned beetles for the shape of its body, length and magnitude, it may challenge the first place, and is the most noted. It is blackish, of a dark red, especially about the outward cover and the breast; it hath two whole horns without joynts, and with branches like a stag as long as ones little finger in such as are grown up, but they are less and shorter in the young ones, (or as Pliny saith) it has long and moveable horns nicked with cloven pincers, and when it will, can bite or nip with them, for it will close them wonderfully, and useth its horns for that end for which crabs and lobsters do their claws; the eyes are hard putting forth and whitish, it hath foreyards on both sides of them, one pair that are branched between the horns and eyes, the joynt whereof makes almost a right angle, and two more breaking forth in the midst of the forehead straight and plain, ending as it were in a little smooth knot. “It goes upon six feet; the fore feet are longer and greater than the rest. Lonicerus makes this to be the male; but I (if there be any distinction between the male and the female) shall no doubt to call it the female: both because the other kindes of beetles are less (for, as Aristotle observes, the males in insects are far less than the females), an also in copulation the females receive from the lesser as experience confirms it. The male is altogether like it, but is less both for body and in horns: which of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 9 though they be not branched on both sides; yet pressed together they do more sharply prick ones finger than the female doth.” In the Berlin Museum, I lately saw a most interesting variety of this species, the right mandible and the right fore tibia being those of a 2, the remainder of the insect exhibiting the usual appearance of the g; such an interesting specimen of a herma- phrodite insect is seldom to be met with. In the same rich col- lection I also saw the type specimen of Lucanus armiger, Herbst, tab. 34, fig, 1 (var. cervus), the mandibles of which show a very singular case of malformation. With regard to the various modifications of form exhibited by L.cervus and other allied species of Europe and Asia Minor, see Dr. Kraatz’s paper, with figures, in the Berlin Entom. Zeitsch. 1860. Lucanvus taticornis ¢, H. Deyrolle, MS. A description of this new species from Asia Minor will be published during the ensuing year by M. Henri Deyrolle in the Ann. Soc. Ent. de France; it is allied to Z. orientalis of Kraatz, differing, however, in having the 6-jointed clava of the antennze strongly developed, and the mandibles considerably more slender. Lucanus Horr ¢, Parry (¢ ignota). (Pl. VI. fig. 2.) L. nigro-brunneus, politus ; mandibulis elongatis, intus quinque- dentatis ; capite supra singulariter coronato, lobato; femo- ribus subtus strid longa latiuscula fulvo-notatis, in pedibus anticis fere obsoleta; tibiis anticis et intermediis irregu- lariter 4 aut 5 denticulatis, posticis 3-dentatis, Long. corp. fere unc. 2; mandib. unc. 1. Hab. Ind. Or., aut Archipel. Malay. Coll. Parry. Head wider than the thorax, both of a brownish-black colour. Clypeus of a long triangular form, placed nearly perpendicularly, Fore margin of the crown of the head with a singular elevated pro- cess, forming two great lobes, separated by an arcuate line. The mandibles are strong and bent somewhat downwards, armed in- teriorily with five teeth, the one near the tip forming with it a fork ; the largest, near the base, blunt and nodose at the tip; the three others equidistant between the centre and apex. Prothorax longitudinally impressed down the centre; the punctuation of the head and prothorax not very strong. The elytra smooth and polished. The antennz of this fine species are unfortunately wanting, but I have little doubt of the insect being a true Lucanus. I have named it in memory of a gentleman whose services ren- dered to Entomology stand preeminent. 10 Major Parry’s Catalogue Lucanus Smiru @, Parry (@ ignota). (Pl. X. fig. 2.) L. nigro-fuscus, subtus dense villosus ; elytris rufo-ferrugineis, nitidis, villosulis; mandibulis apicibus furcatis, intus ante medium lobo tridentato armatis. Long. corp. une. 1, lin. 7. Hab. Ind. Sept. Coll. Parry. Allied to Z. villosus, Hope. Mandibles subquadrate, outer margin sinuate; beyond the middle a tridentate lobe ; the tip of each mandible furcate. Clypeus triangular, slightly excavated. Base of mandibles, head, thorax and elytra (when in good con- dition) with short scattered hairs. Head with ridges and crest much as in L. villosus, but the lateral ridges not so elevated. Femora and tibie with a ferruginous vitta, widely separated, the posterior with two teeth. I have dedicated this new species to F. Smith, Esq., the well-known Hymenopterist, and President of the Entomological Society. Lucanus MAcuLIFEMoRATUS, Motschulsky, Etudes Ent. 1861. ? sericans (De Haan, MS.), Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 103. Specimens of this new and rare species from Japan are in the museums of Leyden and the Zool. Soc. Amsterdam, @, ¢, and in the collections of Count Mniszech and myself. The habitat Java, ascribed to ZL. sericans by M. van Vollenhoven, appears to be erroneous; the latter insect is probably the var. minor of Lucanus maculifemoratus. With reference to Lucanus Hircus, Sturm, Cat. (Java), I have not been able to obtain any information. Gen. Ruxtus, Parry (gen. nov.). Caput transversum, angustum, antice depressum. Mandibulee falcatee, maximee, ad basin fortiter dilatatea. Antenne clava mediocri quadri-articulata. Prothorax lateribus in medio armatis. Corpus elongatum, subparallelum. Tibize posticze inermes. Hexarthrio affine genus. Nomen a gigante Rheto, uno e Titanis, derivatum, The principal distinctive characters above given of this genus . present an interesting connecting link between Lucanus and Hex- arthrius ; on the one hand, the moderately developed clava of its antennee, the flat and generally depressed form of its head, and its unarmed posterior tibia, separate it from Lucanus ; whilst on the other hand it is distinguished from Hexarthrius by the 4-jointed clave of the antenne, and its laterally-armed prothorax. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 1] Rua#tus Westwoopu ¢, Parry (var. max., 9 ignota). (PI. IX. figs. 2 & 8.) Hexarthrius (?) Westwoodii, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 108. R. nigerrimus, nitidus, sublente tenuissime granulosus; mandi- bulis elongatis, falcatis, apicem versus parum deflexis, singula- riter ad basin excavatis et supra infraque dente magno armatis, ante medium dente acuto instructis, apicibus furcatis; capite brevissimo, prothorace angustiori, clypeo transverso haud pro- minulo, concavo, antice in medio angulato; prothorace trans- verso, lateribus sinuatis dente parvo acuto armatis; elytris elongatis, subparallelis ; tibiis anticis 4 aut 5-spinosis, inter- mediis extus in medio dente acuto armatis, posticis simplicibus. Long. corp. unc. 2, lin. 3; mandib. une. 1, lin. 3. Hab. Ind. Or., aut Archip. Ind. (?) I am indebted to J. C. Bowring, Esq., for the possession of this magnificent and unique species. It is one of the largest of the Lucanoid Coleoptera, measuring 33 inches. Hexarturivus Derrorirr $, Parry (var. max., ¢ ignota). (BIS LV: tie? 7.) H. niger; mandibulis exsertis, supra et intus denticulatis, ad basin singulariter excavatis; capite supra bituberculato ; elytris plaga postica castanea. Long. corp. fere unc. 2; mandib. lin. 9. Hab. Siam. Specimen unicum in Coll. Mniszech. Closely allied to H. Parryi, Hope, but of a more elongate and slender form. Mandibles straighter, with the interior portion of their base deeply excavated. The binodose elevations on the head of H. Parryi are replaced by two elevated conical tubercles. The prothorax is narrower and longer, with the anterior tuber- cular angle more prominent. The apical yellow plaga of the elytra does not extend so far towards the base; and the punctua- tion of the mandibles, head and prothorax is infinitely stronger ; the legs are more slender. I am indebted to M. Henri Deyrolle for the characters of this species, at present unique in the museum of Count Mniszech, and received from Count de Castelnau. Hexarturius Cuauporri, H. Deyrolle, MS. This new species from Sumatra, allied to H. Rhinoceros, is in the collection of Count Mniszech. M. Henri Deyrolle proposes to describe it in the Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. for 1864. 12 Major Parry’s Catalogue Hexarturivus Bowrinen ¢, Parry (var. max., @ ignota). (P]. IX. figs. 5 & 7.) H. nigro-fuscus, nitidus ; antennarum clava 6-articulata, mandi- bulis apice subrecurvis, intus 3-dentatis, dente lo et 2do pone medium, tertio ad basin subfurcato; tibiis anticis serratis, intermediis unidentatis, posticis simplicibus. Long. corp. unc. 2; mandib. lin, 9. Hab. Ind. Or. Black. Elytra of a polished ferruginous brown. Mandibles somewhat flattened, more especially at the base, strongly punc- tured ; tips acute and bending upwards ; a sharp prominent tooth behind the tip, succeeded by a smaller one, and at the base a broad obtusely bifid and slightly elevated process. Head closely punc- tured, with the hind margin highly polished, and two small round anterior depressions on the vertex, very slightly emarginate; clypeus small, deflexed and triangular. The prothorax is about the width of the body; like the head closely punctured, with a slightly impressed central line ; the posterior angles slightly emar- ginate. Elytra polished, ferruginous brown, darkest on the suture and at the sides. Legs ferruginous, margined and varied with black. Tarsi black; anterior tibiz serrated externally with three or four small irregularly disposed spines, the apical tooth very prominent and much curved. Gen. OvontoraBis, Hope. Anoplocnemus, Id. The genus Anoplocnemus, Hope (vid. Tr. Ent. Soc. iii. 279), was founded on and included only a single species, viz., 4. Bur- meistert (Hope, Cat. pp. 5 and 16), a gigantic species from the Mysore district, Northern India, at present in the Hopeian Coll. at Oxford (and which may possibly hereafter prove to be only an extreme variety of Odontolabis Cuvera). ‘The principal character assigned to the genus is the absence of spines from all the tibia. As in every other respect there is nothing to distinguish it from the ordinary form and character of the several species belonging to Odontolabis, which, when fully developed, have almost invariably their fore tibia unarmed, I have incorporated Anoplocnemus with Odontolabis, of which genus numerous species have lately been added to our coilections, I am at a loss to imagine why Dr. Burmeister preferred esta- blishing Anoplocnemus as a genus in preference to Odontolabis, Mr. Hope having notified only one species of the former to fourteen of the latter. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. - 13 Opontorasis Vottennovi g@, Parry (var. max., @ ignota). (Pl. VIII. fig. 1.) Lacordairei, Id., MS. olim. O. atro-fuscus; elytris levissimis, flavis, anguste nigro-marginatis, sutura latius nigra; capite magno, lateribus supra densissime rugosis, margine antice reflexo emarginato, plagd magna rufa notato, mandibulis capite fere duplo longioribus, rugoso- punctatis, apicibus furcatis interne denticulatis, et dente forti ante medium instructis; tibiis anticis in medio obsolete uni- dentatis, posticis quatuor inermibus,. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 2, lin. 9. Hab. Borneo. Specimen unicum in Coll. Parry. I had originally named the above species after my distinguished friend Professor Lacordaire, whose reputation as an Entomologist is so universal that I need scarcely allude to it. M. Snellen van Vollenhoven, having received from Sumatra a closely-allied species, and being under the impression that it was identical with the above, courteously retained my MS. name in his description of the Sumatran species (vid. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 104, tab. v. fig. 1.) The two are, however, totally distinct, and I have great pleasure in dedicating this fine species to a gentleman who has rendered such important services to science as Director of the museum of Leyden, and to whom J feel grateful for his kind attention when recently there. O. Vollenhovit has the facies of the preceding genus Hexar- thrius, forming the connecting link between the two genera. It differs from O. Lacordairei in the following particulars—the mandibles are more robust, more convex, and more strongly punctuated ; the head is in proportion larger, with the anterior elevated margin slightly sinuated in the centre, and the angle behind the eye is more obtuse; but the principal difference is to be found in the prothorax, which is considerably narrower, with the sides rectangular instead of being dilated, and the posterior angles strongly emarginate; the body is also somewhat shorter. Opontorasis Lupexinen, Voll. (PI. Il. fig. 1.) Lucanus Ludekingii, Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 104, tab. v. fi 2. O. ater; capite latissimo, in lateribus punctatissimo, fronte transversim carinata; elytris leevissimis testaceis, sutura latius et limbo externo anguste nigris. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) 23 une. Hab. Sumatra. Coll. Mus. Lugdun., de Castelnau, Mniszech et Parry, 14 Major Parry’s Catalogue Oponrotasis Wotrastonu, Parry. (PI. II. figs. 2 & 3, 3, 2; P]. III. fig. 1, var. max.) O. niger; capite margine antico fortiter emarginato, fronte depresso pone oculos exciso, spino acuto armato; mandibulis (var. minor) capite brevioribus, intus fortiter et irregulariter dentatis ; prothorace angusto, lateribus fere parallelis, pone medium spina magna acuta armatis, angulis posticis acutis; elytris aurantiacis, limbo externo tenuissime nigro-marginato, plaga magna triangulari nigra literam V formante a basi fere ad apicem descendente ; tibiis anticis extus trispinosis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 2. Hab. Malacca. Coll. de Castelnau, Mniszech et Parry. Another rare species from the Malay peninsula, recently dis- covered by Count de Castelnau, allied to O.Ludekingz, but abundantly distinct ; the head is smaller and less coarsely punc- tured, whilst the body, of a deeper orange colour, is marked by a large black plaga, extending from the base to near the apex ; whereas in O, Ludekingii there exists only a broad sutural black line. I have dedicated it to my friend T. V. Wollaston, Esq., the well- known author of ‘“ Insecta Maderensia.” Oponrotazsis Mounoti 4, Parry (var. med., @ ignota). (PI. T. fig. 1.) O. niger, nitidus; capite magno antice emarginato, angulis anticis rotundatis, lateribus pone oculos spino acuto instructis; mandibulis brevibus, intus irregulariter et fortiter dentatis ; prothorace transverso, angulis anticis rotundatis, posticis acutis, lateribus pone medium spina acuta armatis; elytris leevissimis, aurantiacis, basi prope scutellum suturaque anguste nigris; tibiis anticis 5-spinosis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. unc. 2; mandib. lin. 6. Hab. Cambodia, Siam. Specimen unicum in Coll. Castelnau. This species is dedicated to the memory of the late M. Mouhot, to whom we are indebted for many new and rare species from the same locality: whilst attempting to explore the unhealthy districts of Cochin China he fell a victim to the climate. Opvontoranis CasteLnaunr ¢, Parry (¢ ignota). (PI. I. fig. 2.) O. giganteus, niger, glaberrimus; mandibulis capite parum longioribus, valde exsertis, interne ad basin dente magno obtuso armatis, et ante basin apicem versus plurimis denticulis of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 15 nodosis irregulariter instructis, apicibus subfurcatis; capite magno, antice depresso, margine subelevato, angulis anticis oblique rotundatis, et infra oculos spina magna obtusa in- structo; prothorace transverso, capite latiori, lateribus an- tice obliquis, angulis posticis emarginatis; elytris subova- libus, brunneo-testaceis, leevissimis, latitudine prothoracis, marginibus externe suturaque tenuiter nigris; tibiis anticis curvatis, et prope apicem spina minuta armatis, quatuor posticis inermibus, Long. corp. une. 2, lin. 5; mandib. lin. 9. Hab. Sumatra. Coll. Castelnau. For the opportunity of placing this magnificent new species of Odontolabis, as well as the three preceding, in the present publi- cation, I am indebted to Count Mniszech, who, through the kind- ness of Count de Castelnau, was enabled to obtain the accompanying faithful figures, executed by M. Migneaux. ‘The above species belongs to the section of Odontolabis having (like O. bicolor, O. Dejeanii, and other species) the prothorax broad, with the sides dilated, and the fore tibize curved; it is one of the largest species of Lucanoid Coleoptera, and, when found with the mandibles fully developed, must indeed be gigantic. It is dedicated to Count de Castelnau, to whom Entomologists are much indebted for many interesting novelties. OponTorazis striatus, 6, 9, H. Deyrolle, MS. A new and interesting species from Malacca, in the collection of Count Mniszech, the description of which will appear in the Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. for 1864. Both the ¢ and @ are strongly pubescent, and in this respect the species assimilates somewhat to O. Dalmanz, Hope; but in its general form it approximates more nearly to O. platynotus, Hope, with which I have for the present located it. OpvontotasBis Brooxeanus 6, @, Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 107, tab. vi. fig. 1. (Pl. VI. fig. 5, var. max.) O. fuscus, nitidus; elytris pallide testaceis, sutura tenui nigra ; mandibulis dilatatis depressis, capite parum_ brevioribus, arcuatis, interne denticulatis ; prothorace plaga nigra ma- culato, angulis posticis valde emarginatis; tibiis anticis curvatis supra sulcatis, extus 2 aut 3 spinis minutis armatis, quatuor posticis inermibus. (Var. max. 6) differt mandibulis longioribus gracilibus falcatis apicibus acutis, prope basin unidentatis et intus pone medium 16 Major Parry’s Catalogue spina magna furcata instructis ; clypeo producto, vix emargi- nato. Foem.—Mandibulis brevibus, punctatis, interne bidentatis, labro parvo transverso; capite parvo, nigro-brunneo, rugose punc- tato ; prothorace plagé nigré maculato, angulis posticis emar- ginatis; elytris litera V basi descendente nigro-signatis ; pedibus nigris; tibiis anticis dilatatis, extus spinis tribus obtusis instructis, posticis intermediisque inermibus. Long. corp. & (mandib. incl.) unc. 2; mandib. (var. max.) 5 lin, Hab. Borneo. A description and figure (of the var. minor) of this species have been already published by M. van Vollenhoven (loc. cit.) ; a second description of it, accompanied by a figure of the var. max., will probably not prove uninteresting. Numerous specimens of this insect were sent to England by Mr. Wallace and distributed among various collections. I may remark, that the black plage, both on the prothorax and body, are very variable, and in some specimens totally wanting. Of males with fully developed man- dibles but two or three were to be found, one of which is now figured. Oponrtotazis Sommer 6, Parry (var. max., @ ignota). (Pl. VI. fig. 4.) O. capite pronoto pedibusque brunneo-testaceis ; capite magno, antice emarginato, pone oculos supra et infra angulato; man- dibulis gracilibus, falcatis, capite paulo brevioribus, apicibus acutis, intus bidentatis; prothorace antice acute angulato, postice valde emarginato; tibiis anticis curvatis, extus spinis duabus aut tribus armatis, posticis inermibus. Long corp. une. 1, lin. 5; mandib. circa lin, 5. Hab. Manilla. Mus. Dom. Sommer (Altone). I am indebted to Count Mniszech for the description and figure of the above; it appears to be allied to the Bornean species O. Brookeanus. OpontoraBis CincatEnsis ¢, Parry, var. max. (Pl. X. fig. 8.) O. niger, nitidus ; capite magno, subquadrato, margine antico elevato, pone oculos inflato; mandibulis capite protho- raceque longioribus, subdepressis, arcuatis, intus ad apicem dente obtuso bifido armatis, apicibus furcatis; prothorace transverso, angulis posticis emarginatis ; elytris levissimis, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 17 attenuatis; tibiis anticis curvatis, ad apicem spina minuta extus instructis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 8; mandib. lin. 9. Hab. Ins. Taprobana. The above insect seems to be rather abundant in Ceylon, numerous specimens having fallen under my notice, but those with highly-developed mandibles appear to be scarce. In Sir Emerson Tennant’s History of Ceylon, i. 27, Cat. of Coleop., the name Cingalensis is misprinted Bengalensis: in the same work, the genus Singhala (sp. tenella, Blanchard), belonging to the family of the Rutelide (vid. Cat. Coll. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, part 2,” p- 198), is erroneously placed with the Lucanide. Oponrtorasts nicriITA, H, Deyrolle, MS. A new species from Ceylon, in the collection of Count Mniszech. According to M. Henri Deyrolle, closely allied to O. Cingalensis ; a description will shortly appear in the Ann. Soc. Ent. de France. It will form, together with O. Cingalensis and O. @ratus, the third section of the genus Odontolabis, having elongate mandibles, but the head, instead of being armed with a spine behind the eyes, is only slightly inflated, the body depressed and highly polished, and the anterior tibiz are curved. The sub-genus Calcodes of Westwood (vide Hope’s Catalogue) is incorporated with this sec- tion, the metallic colour of Calcodes e@ratus forming only one of its chief characters, [Gen. Hererocutues, Westw.* Genus (vel sub-genus) novum inter Anoplocnemum et Odontola- bidem collocandum. Caput maribus magnum, transverso- quadratum, lateribus pone oculos haud tuberculatum, margine antico fere recto, clypeo in tuberculum parvum porrecto. Antenne clava tripartita. Mandibule maribus dente parvo sub-apicali intus armate. Maxille in utroque sexu inermes. Prothorax transversus, lateribus inermibus, parallelis, angulis posticis rotundatis. Tibie anticee extus 4-dentatze, mediz et posticee inermes. Elytra brevia, ovata, haud striata. This new and interesting sub-genus approaches most nearly to Odontolabis, but the insects in that group have the head deeply emarginate in the middle of the anterior margin, as well as armed with a strong spine on each side of the head behind the eyes ; and the * I am indebted to my friend Prof. Westwood for this description, together with others hereafter mentioned ; it formed part of an interesting paper on Luca- noid Coleoptera read by him before the Society on the 4th January, 1864, VOL, IJ, THIRD SERIES, PART I.—MAY, 1864, c 18 Major Parry’s Catalogue tarsi are here much shorter. The female has much the appearance of Odontolabis glabratus, De Haan, but the sides of the prothorax are regularly rounded. From Macrognathus, Burm., as well as from Platyprosopus, Hope, Heterochthes differs in having the middle tibize without a central spine, and in the form of the head and prothorax. This new form affords a proof of the advantage afforded in the classification of the Lucanide by the number of the spines upon the tibiz, especially of the middle and hind legs, as an examination of this character at once leads us to the true affinities of the insect. Instances may indeed occur in which the tibial spurs are liable to be almost obsolete, but the finger will often detect them when the eye cannot clearly perceive them; besides which, of course, this character, like every other, is liable to modification, and is not to be depended upon with absolute certainty, but in a very large majority of cases it truly indicates natural groups. I am much indebted to Major Parry for affording me the oppor- tunity of examining, describing and figuring this new Lucanoid form, rendered as it is the more interesting by the possession of both sexes, as well as of the minor development of the male sex. HertTrrocuTuEs BRAcHYpTERUS, Westw. (Pl. X. fig. 6, 9, figeas 06 87 el eho sly 2.93.) Cladognathus brachypterus, Parry, MS. H. niger, piceo vix tinctus; disco supra levi nitido et fere impunctato, lateribus elytrorum punctatis exceptis ; femori- bus tibiisque castaneis. é maj. Long. mandib. lin. 533 capitis, lin. 3}; prothor. lin. 23; elytr. lin. 58 = long. tot.lin, 174. Latit. capitis, lin. 53; prothor. lin. 5; elytr. lin, 5. é min. Long. mandib. lin. 1; capitis, lin. 23 ; prothor. lin. 2; elytr. lin. 5 = long. tot, lin, 103. Latit. prothor. lin, 4; elytr. lin. 43. Long. mandib. lin. 133; capitis, lin. 143 prothor. lin. 2; elytr. lin. 4 = long. tot. lin. 83. Latit. capitis, lin. 22; prothor. lin. 2; elytr. lin. 4. Habitat in Cambodia. D.Mouhot. Mus. Parry et Saunders. The male has the head much larger than the prothorax, flattened, transverse-quadrate, the fore-margin nearly straight, the front vertical, slightly concave, with the upper edge acute ; the centre of the clypeus produced into a rounded tubercle ; the sides behind the eyes (which are entirely divided by the canthus) very finely and distantly punctured and slightly sinuated, but not produced into a decided tubercle or spine. The mandibles in the larger of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 19 specimens are longer than the head, flattened, curved at the base, and strongly incurved at the apex, the middle part being nearly straight, with a small conical point at a short distance from the apex on the inner edge. ‘The antennz are small, with a three- jointed clava; the maxilla have the outer lobe of moderate length, and strongly ciliated; the palpi have the terminal joint somewhat sabre-shaped; the mentum is very short and broad, with the anterior angles rounded off. The prothorax has the sides straight and nearly parallel, the anterior angles acute, and the hind ones rounded off without any spine or lateral conical point. The elytra are short and ovate, without any longitudinal striz. The fore tibize are rather long, with two teeth on the outer edge, exclusive of the two strong ones at the apex. The four posterior tibiae are destitute of a spine in the middle. The prosternum terminates in a slightly dilated and convex ridge between the base of the fore legs. The tarsi are very short. The mesosternum is slightly channelled along the middle. The small variety of the male has the head smaller than the prothorax, and the latter comparatively smaller than in the larger individuals, with its sides rather more rounded ; the front margin of the head is somewhat emarginate, and the sides behind the eyes are marked with large punctures; the mandibles are shorter than the head, strongly curved, with a large conical tooth near the base on the inner edge, and the apex obtusely bifid; the mesosternum has also a rather deeply impressed, narrow, punctate channel. The female has a much smaller head, the canthus forming an angle at the sides in front of the eyes; the front of the head is slightly emarginate, and the clypeus produced into a small quadrate setose lobe; the sides of the head are very strongly punctured. The prothorax has the sides also punctured, and the lateral margin is more rounded than in the male, especially at the pos- terior lateral angles. The elytra have the sides and extremity punctured. The palpi are rather shorter and stronger than in the male, but the tibize of all the legs are spined, as in the other sex. Plate XI. Fig. 1, The large male somewhat magnified. 1a, outline of portion of the head; 1b, front of the head seen from the front; 1c, maxilla; 1d, mentum; le, mentum seen from within, with the labium and palpus; If, antenna; lg, pro- sternum seen from beneath ; 1h, ditto, seen sideways. Fig. 2, The small-sized male. 2a, outline of the side of the head ; 2 b, mandible. Fig. 3. The female. 3a, the head; 3b, the eye, divided by the canthus ; 3c, antenna; 3d, maxilla; 3e, mentum; 3f, labium and palpus.—J,. O. W.] c2 20 Major Parry’s Catalogue Gen. Neotucanus, Thomson, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1862, p. 415. Odontolabis, Hope, Cat. Anodontolabis, Parry, MS. (vid. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, vol. i. p- 447). ; The species, now amounting to eight in number, which compose this genus, belong to the second section of the genus Odonto- labis of Hope. One of its chief characters is the absence of the spine behind the eyes; it also differs essentially in the size of the mandibles, which never attain to any considerable development, and seldom exceed the length of the head. ‘The species are from East India, China, and the islands of the Indian Ocean. Neotucanus Saunpersil 6, Parry. (PI. IX. fig. 3.) N. fusco-brunneus, nitidus ; mandibulis capite paulo longioribus, curvatis, intus excavatis, versus apicem irregulariter serrate dentatis, dentibusque duobus robustis, suberectis ; capite antice emarginato, angulis ante oculos acutis; prothorace lateribus antice rotundatis, angulis posticis emarginatis ; elytris glabris, extus marginatis; tibiis anticis irregulariter spinis 4 vel 5 instructis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. unc. 2; mandib. lin. 6. Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry (spec. unicum). The totally different form of the mandibles, and especially the two very singular sub-erect teeth with which each of them is armed, sufficiently distinguish this insect from O. Baladeva, Hope, to which in its general form it has a remarkable similarity. NEOLUCANUS CINGULATUS @, Parry. (Pl. IV. fig. 3.) N. nigro-castaneus, nitidus, subparallelus ; elytris singulis vitta obliqua flava ab humero ad apicem notatis. Long. corp. unc, 1, lin. 3. Hab. Malacca. Coll. Castelnau (spec. unicum). I am indebted for my acquaintance with this species, and also for the drawing from the pencil of M. Migneaux, to Count Mniszech. It is allied to O. castanopterus, Hope, from northern India, Neotucanus Cuampiont 4, Parry. L. niger, sub-opacus ; prothoracis elytrorumque lateribus pau- Julum explanatis; mandibulis brevibus, apicibus subfurcatis, lateribus intus excavatis, sex-denticulatis ; capite prothorace- que granulosis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 14. Hab. China. This species is similar both in form and character to N. Sinicus, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 21 described and figured by Mr. W. Saunders in Trans. Ent. Soe. N.S. iii. 48, pl. iv. figs. 2 & 3; the colour of the latter is dark chestnut, whilst Z. Championi is dull black; it was taken by the late Major Champion at Hong Kong, but specimens have subse- quently keen received from the interior of China, collected by Mr. Fortune. Gen, Crapoanatuus, Burm. Handb. d. Ent. v. 364. Macrognathus, Hope, Cat. p. 5. Metopodontus, Id. p. 4. Prosopocoilus, Id. p. 4. This genus, to which Dr. Burmeister united Hexarthrius and Cyclophthalmus of Hope, includes a larger proportion of species than any other belonging to the Lucanoid Coleoptera, comprising nearly sixty in number; which, with the exception of a few from the eastern and western coasts of Africa, are all either from India and China, or the islands of the Indian Ocean. It includes also the sub-genera Metopodontus and Prosopocoilus of the same author, both established with reference to the number of spines upon the tibize as well as upon the bimucronated and excavated anterior part of the head. First, with regard to the tibial spines: these are often found to be most variable, and as generic characteristics are, I think, unworthy of the importance which has been attributed to them, especially as a rigid adherence to such a system necessitates the wide separation of species in all other respects intimately related. Secondly, with regard to the binodose or strongly excavated character of the anterior portion of the head: this formation is so entirely dependent upon the development of the individual, that it cannot be regarded even as a specific, much less a generic character. I have, therefore, deemed it advisable to unite both Metopodontus and Prosopocoilus with the genus Cladognathus of Dr. Burmeister, which must only be considered after all as a temporary refuge for a vast number of species, forming a peculiar group in this family, and sufficiently aberrant in form and character to justify perhaps their separation into several genera, but our present knowledge of the species is too limited to warrant more than a sectional arrangement. ‘Ciapoewatuus pouitus ¢, Parry (¢ ignota). (Pl. X. fig. 5.) C. castaneo-fuscus, nitidus; mandibulis brevibus, curvatis, dentibus tribus armatis; capite supra oculos angulato ; 22 Major Parry’s Catalogue elytris glaberrimis, sutura late nigro-fusca; tibiis anticis denticulatis, quatuor posticis unispinosis, Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 4; mandib. lin. 4. Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry (spec. unicum). Head with the vertex smooth, punctured, more thickly so on the sides. Mandibles scarcely longer than the head, depressed, gradually curved, with a strong prominent tooth near the base, and two smaller ones before the tip; clypeus faintly trilobed. Head deeply emarginate in front, anterior angles bisinuate, deeply and coarsely punctured on the sides, slightly depressed on the vertex. Prothorax wider than the elytra, closely punctured in front and at the sides. Posterior angles armed with a small spine. Scutellum punctured. Elytra smooth, of a ferruginous brown, the sutural portion nearly black, minutely and sparsely punctate, more especially at the sides; humeral angles prominent. CLADOGNATHUS QuADRINoDosUS ¢, Parry (2 ignota). (Pl. VIII. fig. 4.) C. ferrugineo-fuscus ; capitis vertice minute quadrituberculato ; mandibulis gracilibus, porrectis, apicibus acutis, intus spinis 8 vel 9 minimis irregulariter dentatis; tibiis intermediis denticulo minimo instructis, posticis inermibus; tarsis sub- setosis. Long. corp. lin. 9; mandib. lin. 5. Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry, etiam Mus. Brit. Above ferruginous-brown, beneath lighter. Head deeply punctured, with four minute tubercles arranged transversely on the vertex. Mandibles elongate, narrow, and acute at the tips, of the same length as the body, and armed with 8 or 9 minute teeth and tubercles. The sides of the thorax almost straight. Body convex. Outer edge of front tibize minutely crenulated. CiLApDoGNATHUs ciNcTus, Montrousier, Faune de l’Ile de Wood- lark, p. 27. This species is also, according to Mr. Wallace, found in the Islands of New Guinea, Ki and Arou, and must be considered as very questionably distinct from C, Bison, differing in having the four posterior femora entirely black beneath, and the anterior with a small rufous spot, whereas in C. Bison the rufous patch exists on all the femora; in other respects they appear to be closely allied. I am not acquainted with a fully developed specimen; those in the collection of Mr. Wallace, and my own, being medium varieties. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 23 Crapoenatuus Warxacerr 4, Parry (var. max., 2 ignota). (PI. VI, fig. 2.) C. niger; elytris dorso fusco-castaneo, lateribus nigro-margi- natis, vitta flava latiuscula notatis; labro producto, trigono- conico; mandibulis porrectis, haud arcuatis, irregulariter denticulatis, et intra basin versus fortiter emarginatis ; tibiis anticis extus irregulariter denticulatis, quatuor pos- ticis inermibus. Long. corp. fere unc. 2; mandib. lin, 8. Hab. Ins. Gilolo. Coll. Wallace. Mandibles nearly straight, slightly curved from the base to the apex, which is bifurcate, the general surface flattened ; internally at the base deeply emarginate, with one strong tooth just before the middle, and two smaller ones behind and before it, Head with a large oblique flattened space on the crown, emar- ginate in front, anterior angles obliquely truncate, sides slightly swollen behind the eyes; labrum short, subtriangular, general surface shining, but very delicately shagreened, covered beneath with ferruginous hairs. Prothorax considerably wider than the head, smooth, anterior angles somewhat produced, and truncate ; anterior and posterior margins bisinuate, sides slightly waved, posterior angles obliquely truncate. Elytra widest just below the humeral angle, deep chestnut brown, narrowly margined with black, with a widish yellow vitta extending from the shoulder nearly to the apex, the vitta narrowest at the humeral angle. Legs black, anterior tibiz armed externally with two teeth and a few slight crenulations, intermediate and posterior tibiae unarmed ; femora and trochanters of intermediate and hind legs furnished behind with a narrow line of brownish hairs. This unique and fine species is named after A. R. Wallace, Esq., to whose indefatigable exertions natural history in general is so much indebted. Although somewhat approaching in general appearance the gigantic species of the genus Odontolabis, it bears nevertheless, I think, a nearer affinity to the species of that section of the genus Cladognathus which Mr, Hope in his Catalogue designated as Prosopocoilus, and of which Cladognathus Lafertet may be considered the representative. Crapocnatuus Larerter 2. (PI. VIII. fig. 5.) C. Laferteit $, Reiche, Revue Zool. 1852. Feem.—C. fuscus; capite rugoso-punctato, postice lavigato ; mandibulis brevibus, rugosis, unidentatis; elytris pallide ferru- 24 Major Parry’s Catalogue gineis, ineequaliter punctatis, sutura ad basin marginibusque nigro-fuscatis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 1. g Pp Hab. N. Hebrides. Female with the head rather coarsely punctured, except on the vertex, which is smooth. Mandibles short, punctured, the left with a tooth a little before the apex, the right with one near the base. Prothorax coarsely punctate, especially at the sides and in front; elytra punctate, having some of the punctures disposed in lines; the external margin of the front tibize crenulated, of the intermediate and posterior armed with a-single spine. This species was found rather abundantly at New Hebrides, by Mr. M‘Gilleray, the naturalist to the expedition of H. M. S. Herald. The locality of New Holland assigned to it by Mons. Reiche appears to be erroneous. Crapoenatuus Tracutus, Voll. (PI. VII. fig. 6). $ C. Tragulus, Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 113, tab. vii. fig. 4, 5, 6 (1861). C. productus, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc., 1862, p. 109. Fem.—C. niger, subnitidus; clypeo parvo, rotundato; mandi- bulis brevibus, arcuatis, unidentatis, rugoso-punctatis; capite rugoso-punctato, postice levi; prothorace antice angustato, lateribus rotundatis, fusco-cinnamomeis, plaga obliqua nigra notatis; tibiis quatuor posticis denticulo parvo armatis. Long. corp. lin. 11—12. Hab. Ternate (nec Sumatra). On my recent visit to Leyden, having an opportunity of con- sulting the specimens described by M. van Vollenhoven in his interesting memoir above referred to, I ascertained that the insect described and figured by him, fig. 6, as the 2 of T’ragulus is in fact the 2 of D. purpurascens (var. Saiga? ); vid. tab. vii. fig. 1. There are several specimens in the collection, and M. van Vol- Jenhoven kindly presented me with the one from which the present diagnosis is drawn up. With reference to my description of C. productus 6, as having the intermediate tibiz unarmed, I find, having subsequently examined numerous fully developed specimens, that this is an error, and upon again referring to the type specimen in Mr. Wallace’s cabinet the rudiment of a very minute tubercle, but scarcely visible to the naked eye, is found to of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 25 exist ; this tubercle ought to have been represented in Pl, VII. fig. 6. CLADOGNATHUSs AssIMILIs @, Parry (4 ignotus). productus ¢, Parry, Proc. Ent, Soc., 1862, p. 109. Feem.—C. niger, subnitidus ; clypeo parvo, rotundato ; mandi- bulis brevibus, unidentatis ; capite antice rugoso, punctulato, postice leviusculo; prothorace antice angustato, lateribus oblique rotundatis, fulvo-brunneis, in medio nigro-maculatis ; elytris fulvo-cinnamomeis, marginibus externe et sutura tenuiter nigris; pedibus rugoso-punctatis, nigris ; tibiis inter- mediis denticulo minuto armatis, posticis inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 1. Hab. Ins. Waigiou. Coll. Wallace. Specimen unicum. The above description was originally given as that of the 2 of C. productus (but which species has now proved to be identical with C. Tragulus, Voll.). I have, however, since my recent visit to Leyden, ascertained, as already previously stated, that it is not the 2 of C. Tragulus, from which it differs in the uniform colour of the elytra and in the posterior tibiz being unarmed, Unfortunately the ¢ of this new species is at present unknown, Crapocnatuus Zesra ¢, Oliv. Ent. i. 24, 20, tab. v. fig. 17. Thunb. Mem. Nat. de Moscou, 1. 206. Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 108. (PL DVafig5552.) Lucanus Zebra, Mandibulis porrectis, versus apicem denticu- Jatis; thorace elytrisque testaceis, nigro-maculatis. Lucano suturali paulo major. Mandibule porrecte, longitudine capitis, denticulate, nigra. Caput nigrum, fulvo-pubescens, Thorax levis, testaceus, macula magna dorsali, macula ob- longa utrinque punctoque marginali nigris. Elytra testacea, macula baseos vittdque media lata abbreviata nigris. The above is Olivier’s description of this rare species; the type specimen (é) described from the cabinet of M. Raye is now in the Museum of Leyden, with the locality of “ Birman Empire” attached to it, although Olivier makes no mention of its habitat. The @, a single specimen of which is in the collection of Count Mniszech, is now figured Pl. LV. fig. 5. CrapocNnartuus sutuRALIs , Oliv. Ent. i. 16, tab. iv. fig. 12. Lucano parallelipipedo paulo major. Antenne nigre. Mandibulee 26 Major Parry’s Catalogue exserta, apice acute, intus basi denticulate, nigro-testacez, longitudine capitis. Caput supra testaceum, marginibus vitta- que media bifurcata nigris. Thorax testaceus, elytris capite- que latior, marginibus tenuissimé puncto utrinque vittaque media nigris. Scutellum nigrum. Elytra testacea, marginibus tenuissimé suturdque nigris. Corpus subtus pedesque nigro- brunnea. Long. une. 1, lin, 3. Hab. Siam aut Malacca. Another rare species to which Olivier assigns no locality ; the only specimen I am acquainted with is in my own collection ; it is either from Siam or Malacca. Closely allied to O. occipitalis, Hope, from which the unarmed posterior angles of its head, in- dependent of its coloration, amply suflice to distinguish it. CLADOGNATHUS PERPLEXUS 6, Parry (var. minor, @ ignota). C. rufo-castaneus, sublente minute punctatus, marginibus sutura- que nigrescentibus ; mandibulis brevibus, apicibus acutis, marginibus internis intus sex-dentatis; tibiis intermediis minute tuberculatis, posticis inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 1. Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry. A single specimen only of the above is in my collection; it most resembles in general appearance and colour the var. minor of C. dorsalis, Erichson, differing however in having the inter- mediate tibiz slightly armed and in the colour of the elytra being uniform, whereas in C. dorsalis the disk of the elytra is remarkable for its shiny polished character, whilst the sides are sub-opaque,. CLADOGNATHUS ATTENUATUS 6, Parry (¢ ignota). (Pl. IV. Fig. 2.) C. fulvo-testaceus; mandibulis, antennis, pedibusque luteo-squa- mosis; mandibulis arcuatis, capite parum brevioribus, intus irregulariter serratis; prothorace capite latiori, lateribus fere rectis, angulis posticis emarginatis; elytris angustis, versus apicem attenuatis; tibiis anticis extus quadridenticu- latis, quatuor posticis inermibus ; tarsis subtus setosis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 11. Hab. Malacca. Coll. Castelnau et Mniszech. CLADOGNATHUS squamitaTERIS 6, Parry (var. minor). C. fusco-niger, nitens, subparallelus; mandibulis brevibus, ir- of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 27 regulariter minute dentatis; elytrorum prothoracisque mar- ginibus lateralibus pilis cinereis tectis ; tibiis quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 1. Hab. Borneo, Malacca. Coll. Parry, Wallace et Saunders. Since my notice of this species in the Proc. Ent. Soc., 1862, p- 110, specimens of both sexes have been received from Malacca ; the female is also characterized by having the sides of the prothorax and elytra covered with a thick greyish pubescence, whilst the re- mainder of the body is of a highly polished character. CLapoGNATHUs ELEGANS 4, Parry (2 ignota) (PI. VIII. fig. 3.) C. cinnamomeus, gracilis; mandibulis capite paulo longioribus, arcuatis, depressis, ante apicem dente truncato instructis ; capite antice fortiter emarginato ; elytris punctatis, subtiliter striatis, sutura fuscata. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 8. Hab. Ind. Or, Coll. Parry. Of a cinnamon-brown ; mandibles flattened, gradually bent to the apex, which is very acute, externally before the tip is a broad, flat, truncate tooth, separated from the apex by a deep longitudinal fissure; sides of the prothorax with numerous scattered punctures, the middle smooth except on the dorsal line, where it is sparsely punctate ; above the posterior angle is a slight blackish tubercle ; the anterior and posterior margins are somewhat fuscous. Elytra with the suture very smooth, polished and brown, the rest cin- namon-coloured, rather thickly punctured and striated, the strize disappearing before the tip. Anterior tibiae armed externally at the apex with three teeth, and with a minute one about the middle ; posterior tibice simple, with lines of punctures. Abdomen beneath with the segments narrowly margined with brown. CLADOGNATHUS FLAVIDUS ¢, Parry (var. max., 2 ignota). (Pl. VIII. fig. 2.) C. castaneus; mandibulis, capite, thorace, suturaque nigro- marginatis; mandibulis elongatis, subdepressis, intus quadri- dentatis, dente ante apicem obtuso, dente medio elongato subtrigono ; tibiis inermibus. Long. corp. une. 1, lin. 6; mandib. lin, 5. Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry. Yellowish-chestnut, margined with black. Head broader than long, rather narrower than the prothorax ; sides behind the eyes 28 Major Parry’s Catalogue slightly arcuate, in front notched. Mandibles as long as the head and prothorax together, depressed, a small tooth near the base, a smaller blunt tooth behind the middle, closely followed by another rather large and triangular; close to the apex is an obtuse tooth, separated from the preceding by a rounded sinus. Prothorax chestnut, narrowly margined with black, considerably wider than the elytra at the base, sides slightly rounded, obliquely emarginate behind, the emargination with a tooth in front, and above the posterior angles a fovea. The elytra of a pale chestnut- brown, finely and closely punctured, shining, the suture somewhat darker, the humeral angles prominent. ‘The tibia are all entirely without teeth. CLADOGNATHUs FULVoNoTATUS @, Parry (var. max., @ ignota). (Pl. VI. fig. 3.) C. nigro-brunneus, zneo-tinctus; prothorace lateribus fulvo- bimaculatis ; elytris dorso valde politis, linea fulva pone humerum fere ad apicem ducta notatis. Long. corp. lin. 10; mandib. lin. 4. Hab. Ind. Or. (Cherra Pounga, Ponjee?) Coll. Parry. Head smooth, dark brown, with a slight greenish hue; man- dibles elongate, narrow, sides nearly parallel, apex slightly forked, with a wide, somewhat truncate bifid tooth just beneath ; clypeus slightly sinuate. Prothorax of the colour of the head, anterior and lateral margins passing into ferruginous brown ; on each side are two fulvous spots, nearly parallel with the lateral margin, the posterior the largest, ovate ; scutellum slightly punctured. Elytra with the dise flattened and highly polished; from behind each shoulder a fulvous line proceeds nearly parallel with the sides, curves towards the suture near the apex, and is dilated towards the end. Underside of body and sides of mandibles ferruginous; all the femora have a broad fulvous ring ; the fore tibiae are irre- gularly serrated on the outer edge, the intermediate with one small tooth-about the middle, and the posterior unarmed. CiapocGNatuus BisicnatTus, Parry. (Pl. VII. fig. 3 3,5 @). C. niger, subeeneus, glaberrimus ; mandibulis brevibus, in medio unidentatis ; elytris singulis ad apicem macula (@) aut striga (¢) fulva notatis; femoribus intermediis et posticis fulvo-maculatis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin, 10. Hab. Ind. Or, (Cherra Pounga, Ponjee?). Coll. Parry. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 29 Head of ¢ smooth, with a few scattered punctures near the eye; mandibles of the same length as the head, acute at the apex, in the middle with a projecting lobe, the edge of which is crenulated ; the clypeus wider than in the 9, slightly emarginate; the pro- thorax is smooth, darker than the elytra, slightly convex, pos- terior angles rounded ; elytra smooth, zneous, with a row of minute punctures near the suture, and parallel with it an oblique yellow line near the apex; the femora of the four posterior legs on the underside with a small yellow patch; the anterior tibiz irregularly crenulated externally with four or five prominent tubercles ; the intermediate are armed with a small spine, the pos- terior unarmed. ‘The Q is broader and more convex than the ¢, the head is distinctly punctured, with two slight elevations on its surface; mandibles short and acute, with a distinct tooth in the middle; the prothorax is very smooth on the disc, distinctly punctured on the sides as well as upon the anterior and posterior margins, with the hinder angles rounded. Scutellum with a few scattered punctures ; elytra more convex than in the ¢, with the sides parallel, smooth in the centre, but punctured at the base, lateral margins and apex, and with a small, yellow, nearly round spot near the apex. The fore tibize are crenulated, with four or five small prominent tubercles, the four posterior are armed with a small spine near the centre, and as in the ¢ the four posterior femora have a small fulvous patch on the underside. CLapocnatuus moprstus ¢, Parry (@ ignota). (Pl. XII. fig. 1.) C. brunneo-castaneus vel nigro-piceus, prothoracis et elytrorum lateribus fulvis; capite, mandibulis, tarsis, antennisque nigris ; capite transverso, parvo, tenuissime granuloso, antice depresso, paulo emarginato, pone oculos obtuse angulato ; mandibulis gracilibus, capite paulo longioribus, curvatis, rugoso-punctatis, ante medium dente interno obtuso sub- erecto armatis, apicibus dilatatis, bidentatis ; prothorace angulis anticis rotundatis posticisque obliquis, minute gra- nuloso, disco nitido; elytris castaneis,~ nitidis, marginibus latis luteis, subopacis ; corpore infra nigro-rufescente ; tibiis anticis extus serrulatis, 4 posticis inermibus. Long. corp. lin. 10; mandib., lin. 2. Hab. in Africa oce. tropicali. Coll. Parry. Specimen unicum. The general appearance of this new species allies it closely to C. faber, Thomson, from which, however, it may readily be dis- 30 Major Parry’s Catalogue tinguished by the short obtuse posterior angles of the head, the oblique posterior angles of its prothorax, and the well-defined luteous margin of the elytra. For the figure of this species, and the following description and remarks, I am indebted to Prof. Westwood.* [This species somewhat closely resembles L. faber, Dej., from Guinea, especially in the toothing of the mandibles, but that species possesses a spine in the middle of the intermediate tibiz. It is most nearly allied to Cl. picipennis, Hope, Cat. Lucan., from Cape Palmas, but the head of that species has the lateral margins behind the eyes only slightly dilated, and the mandibles of the large variety of the male are differently toothed: it has also a triangular point in the middle of the clypeus. The upper surface of the head is opaque, and entirely covered with extremely minute granules (as is also that of the prothorax), the space behind the eyes being strongly punctate. The anterior lateral angles of the head are obliquely truncate, posteriorly produced, somewhat rounded and extending half across the eye: in front of the eye is a moderately raised obtuse tubercle. ‘The anterior margin of the head is bisinuated, the clypeus being transverse, short, with the anterior rounded. The lateral margin of the head, behind each of the eyes, is produced into a rounded lobe. The mandibles are rather longer than the head, somewhat slender, regularly curved, strongly punctured, with an obtuse spine directed inwards beyond the middle of the inner margin; the apex somewhat digitated, with a small subapical tooth, between which and the spine is a broad obtuse tooth, The mentum is of moderate width and very rudely punctured. The prothorax is rather broader and more glossy than the head, with the anterior angles rounded, the sides but slightly oblique and the hind lateral angles obliquely truncate; the sides are broadly dark fulvous, with a very slender raised black margin also extending along the bisinuated hind margin of the prothorax: near the hind angles is a dark lateral spot on each side; the scutellum is very finely punctured, as is also the base of the elytra. ‘The latter are very glossy, almost quite smooth, very dark chestnut down the middle, with a broad lateral border of fulvous, the extreme lateral margin being raised and black. The legs are pitchy black, with the femora castaneous, the fore tibize are serrulated along the outer edge and armed with three stronger teeth at the apex, the four posterior tibiz are des- titute of a spine in the middle of the outer margin, The body € See note *, ante, p. 17. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 31 beneath is dark castaneous, glossy, almost impunctate, with the abdomen black. Pl. XII. fig. 1. The insect somewhat magnified; la, the left side of the head with the clypeus; 1b, the extremity of the right mandible; lc, the mentum, with the four palpi in situ——J. O. W.] CLapoGNATHUs DEcIPIENS @, Parry. (PI. IV. fig. 4.) C. niger, nitidus; elytris fusco-castaneis, marginibus vitta flava latiuscula notatis ; capite parvo, antice impresso, tenuis- sime punctato; prothorace lateribus rotundatis, dorso postice utrinque foveolato; elytris levibus; tibiis anticis angustis, extus crenulatis, quatuor posticis unidentatis, tarsis subtus setosis. Long. corp. unc. 1, Hab. Malabar. The only example of this species with which I am acquainted is in the cabinet of Count Mniszech. In the rich collection of the Leyden Museum there exists an undescribed ¢ specimen, the general sculpture of which induces me to refer it to the present species ; but the habitat not being given, and the fact that the head affixed to the specimen has the appearance of belonging to a different species, prevent me from speaking with greater certainty as to their identity. CLADOGNATHUs DORSALIS, Erichson, Act. Acad. Cesar. Leopold. v. 16, Suppl. tab. 37, fig. 6. é (var. max). C. castaneus, plagA magn4 levissim4 prope suturam; corpore subtus, antennis, mandibulis, pedibusque nigro-piceis. Rufo-castaneus, nitidus ; capite magno, antice emarginato, mar- gine elevato; mandibulis capite cum prothorace paulo lon- gioribus, falcatis, depressis, intus irregulariter armatis, apici- bus curvatis ; prothorace lateribus fere rectis, subopacis, angulis posticis paulo emarginatis, macul4 utrinque nigra indistincta versus angulos posticos, dorso nitido; elytris dorso lzevissimo, lateribus subopacis; tibiis anticis rectis, denticulis 4 vel 5 parvis instructis, posticis quatuor inermibus, Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 5; mandib. lin. 7. Erichson (1. c.) described the female only, the male being appa- rently unknown to him. Dr. Burmeister, Handb. d, Ent. v. 370, has referred L. cavifrons (Burm. MS.), Hope, Cat. p. 13, to the above described species; this is undoubtedly an error, Neither 32 Major Parry’s Catalogue the Rev. F. W. Hope nor Dr. Burmeister was acquainted with the veritable male of Erichson’s species, which is now described for the first time, and which differs essentially from C. cavifrons (var. max.), Hope, by its broader and more convex form, the highly polished dorsal patch on the elytra, and in the structure of the mandibles, which in the insect now under consideration are some- what broader, strongly curved at the apex, destitute of the flat basal tooth, and instead of the group of subapical teeth only, as in C. cavifrons, are armed with a stout tooth placed a little above their centre, with four or five smaller ones between it and the apical tip; some of these teeth, however, may be more properly called nodose elevations. ‘The anterior tibize moreover are straight, and not curved as in C., cavifrons. The female is equally to be distinguished from that of C. cavi- frons by its more robust and convex form ; the anterior tibize are considerably more dilated, their outer edge also strongly denti- culated ; the four posterior tibia, like all the females of this genus (with the exception of C. cavifrons), are armed with a single spine, CLADOGNATHUS CAVIFRONS, Hope. $ Lucanus cavifrons, Hope, Cat. p. 13 (var. max.). g L. tenuipes, Id. Cat. p. 18. Odontolabis tenuipes, Id. Cat. p. 5. The only two specimens of ZL. tenuipes, Hope, with which I am acquainted are in the Hopeian Collection and the British Museum, and were obtained by Mr. Cuming during his visit to the Philip- pines ; after careful examination, I have satisfied myself, from the general sculpture of the head and the short strongly-punctate mandibles, that both these specimens are females; but from the remarkable slenderness of the anterior tibiae, and from the absence of spines on those of the four posterior legs, they have somewhat the appearance of males with short undeveloped mandibles. The specimen described by Mr. Hope is somewhat darker than that of the British Museum, assimilating more in colour with the male, which is chestnut-brown. While, on the one hand, the unarmed tibize of the four posterior legs would assign tenwipes to the genus Odontolabis, in which Mr. Hope placed it, its slender fore tibiz and general structure of body place it indubitably with those in- sects which belong to the genus Cladognathus, and I am strongly inclined to believe that it is the ¢ of C. cavifrons. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 33 CLADOGNATHUS APPROXIMATUS 64, Parry (var. max.). C. nigro-castaneus, nitidus ; eapite subquadrato, antice depresso, emarginato, subopaco, confertissime punctulato ; mandibulis gracilibus, capiti cum prothorace longitudine zqualibus, fere rectis, intus spinis 3—5 armatis, apicibus furcatis ; pro- thorace transverso, elytris latiori, lateribus fere rectis, angulis posticis obtusis, dorso sublavigato, tenuissime granuloso ; elytris nitidis, sublente minute punctulatis, apicem versus attenuatis; tibiis anticis extus irregulariter denticulatis, quatuor posticis simplicibus. Long. corp. unc. 1 ; mandib. lin. 7. Hab. Cochin China, Laos. Mus. Saunders et Parry 2, 2. Collected by the Jate M. Mouhot, and allied to C. Buddha, Hope (Trans. Linn. Soc. xix. 107), the type specimen of which is in my own collection, but differs in the form and armature of the mandibles, in the head being wider and much less emargi- nate in front, and in the narrow and more attenuated form of the elytra. CLADOGNATHUS EXxIMtus, Parry. C. castaneus, nitidus (¢ var. med.) ; mandibulis nigris, capitis longitudine, subtrigonis, supra crebre punctatis, intus obtuse denticulatis ; capite magno, nigro-piceo, depresso, late semi- circulariter emarginato, margine antice leviter elevato ; pro- thorace transverso, capite elytrisque Jatiori, confertissime granuloso, angulis anticis rotundatis, posticis obtusis, late- ribus utrinque macula nigra notatis ; elytris tenuissime punc- tatis, sutura late nigro-marginata; subtus fusco-ferrugineus ; antennis pedibusque piceis; tibiis anticis extus serratis, inter- mediis spina acuta armatis, posticis tuberculo parvo instructis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) une. 1, lin. 4. Mandibulis brevibus, intus unidentatis; capite rugoso-punctato; prothorace lateribus rotundatis, parce fortiterque punctato, disco nigro-piceo ; elytris crebre irregulariterque punctatis. Long. corp. une. 1. Hab. Afric. Occ. Coll. Parry. This species is allied both to C. Senegalensis, Klug, and C. quadridens, Hope, from which, however, its rich chestnut colour, similar to that of C. Savagei, Hope, at once distinguishes it. VOL. Il, THIRD SERIES, PART I.—MayY, 1864, D o4 Major Parry’s Catalogue CLADoGNATHUS SENEGALENSIS, Klug. Lucanus Senegalensis ¢, Klug, Erm. Reis. Atl. 38, 103. Dr. Burmeister in his Handbuch der Entomologie, v. 371, gives this insect as synonymous with Zwcanus Antdlopus ¢, Swederus (Act. Holm. 1787, iii. 186, tab. viii. fig. 3); in this I do not feel disposed to agree, since Swederus describes the prothorax of his species as “ lateribus subrotundatis,” and figures the four posterior tibiae as being unarmed—characters quite at variance with the true Lucanus Senegalensis of Dr. Klug, a spe- cimen of which from my own collection I have recently compared with the typical insect in the Berlin Museum. ‘This species is readily distinguished in having the posterior angle of the pro- thorax strongly emarginate, as well as the anterior angle of this emargination being armed with a small acute spine ; hence Mons. Gory applied the specific epithet of bispinosus to the female (according to a specimen so ticketed in the Oxford Museum). The mandibles are nearly straight in all their different developments, and the four posterior tibia are armed each with a single spine. As regards the veritable Z. Antilopus of Swederus, I am inclined, from the description as well as from the figure, to refer it to Lucanus quadridens, Hope (var. minor), with which it agrees in the form of the mandibles (representing evidently those of an undeveloped male, and characterized as such by the description *‘mandibulis capite vix longioribus’”), in the posterior angles of the thorax being rounded, and in the absence of the spines from the four posterior tibie; although I must remark that in fully developed individuals a minute tubercle is occasionally seen on the intermediate tibia. These spines or tubercles on the tibiz, however, are, as I have already had occasion to state, most capricious, depending considerably, as to their size, and even for their very existence, on the maturity of growth the insect may arrive at, and can in no way be relied upon either specifically or generically. In respect to the L. Antilopus, Burm., Hand. der Ent. v. 371, this insect may possibly be identical with Z. Senegalensis, Klug, but as no mention is made of the posterior angles of the prothorax being rounded or emarginate, or of the existence or non-existence of the spine alluded to by Dr. Klug, it is difficult to fix exactly the species to which it ought to be referred. If identical with Senegalensis, Klug, it certainly is not the Antilopus of Swederus; and should it bea more fully developed specimen of Antilopus, Swed., (as the mandibles are described as being as long as the head and of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 35 body together) it will then, I think, prove, as intimated above, to be synonymous with ZL. quadridens, Hope, a specimen of the latter in my own collection corresponding so exactly with both the description and figure of Swederus that it makes me very much disposed to unite them together, CrapoeNnatuus curvirgs, Hope, Cat. p. 25 (2). $ C. subconvexus, niger, nitidus, tenue punctatus; capite magno, antice emarginato, crebre punctato, medio triangu- lariter impresso, lateribus pone oculos inflatis; mandibulis capite vix longioribus, suberectis, apicibus acutis, intus pro- funde excavatis et irregulariter denticulatis ; prothorace lateribus (ut in 2) subserratis, angulis anticis rotundatis, posticis obtusis, spina minuta armatis; elytris angulis humera- libus acutis; tibiis anticis irregulariter serratis, intermediis spina minuta instructis, posticis simplicibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 9. Hab. Ind. Or. Coll. Parry. In the female, which sex alone was known to Mr. Hope, the anterior tibize are curved exteriorly, whence the specific name ; those of the male however are but very slightly curved. The small lateral spine existing on the prothorax of the male is often very indistinct in the female; the rudiment however of it is mostly to be traced. ‘The peculiar formation of the mandibles in the present insect, and its small size, render it one of the most con- spicuous species of the genus in which, for the present, lL have placed it. Crapocnatuus rupis 2, Westw.* (PI. XI. fig. 4.) [ Dorcus (Prosopocoilus?) rudis, Westw. Feemina.—Tota nigra, rude punctata; elytris costatis, inter- stitiis punctatissimis, capitis angulis anticis lateralibus obliquis, oculis septo dimidiatim incisis; prothoracis an- gulis posticis oblique emarginatis, elytris angulo humerali prominenti notatis. Long. corp. (cum mandib.) lin. 10. Hab. India vel Insulis Indicis? In Mus. D. Parry. The unique insect on which this species is here proposed is a female of a glossy black colour, distinguished from the majority of the females of the genus Dorcus by the oblique emargination of * See note * ante, p. 17. D2 36 Major Parry’s Catalogue the posterior angles of the prothorax, in which respect it agrees with Luc. punctiger, Hope (Cat. Lucan. p. 24; Linn. Trans. xviii. p- 592), but which differs from the present species in the elytra being destitute of costz, and in its much less strongly punctured prothorax. The type specimens of the last-mentioned species are females, and are regarded with considerable probability by Major Parry as the other sex of LZ. bulbosus, Hope, which, with other African and Indian species, constitutes Mr. Thomson’s second section of Prosopocoilus. The head is very rudely punctured on the upper side; the anterior lateral angles are obliquely rounded off; the clypeus forms a bilobed projection ; the mandibles are rather small, acute at the tips, with a tooth beyond the middle of the inner margin; on the middle of the crown are two irregular smooth patches, and there is a somewhat elevated space between each eye and the base of the antennz ; the eye is divided through its anterior half by the sharp curved eanthus. The mentum is short, almost semicircular, and rudely punctured. The maxille are short, the inner lobe termi- nating in a sharp, hooked spine (a character also found in the female of Pr. Martini, Hope, an African species of this sub-genus). The labium is terminated by two elongated, strongly-setose lobes, and the labial palpi are rather long, slender, and with the terminal joint thick and ovate. The prothorax is strongly punctured, the sides are rounded and slightly serrulated, the posterior lateral angles are obliquely emarginate. ‘The elytra are elongate, some- what parallel, each with three strong coste, the middle one interrupted near the shoulder; between the raised suture and the first costa are two slender lines edged with punctures, and the interstices between the costee are very closely and finely punctured. The extremity of the elytra is also very thickly punctured. The body beneath is but slightly punctured, except at the sides of the metasternum and apical segment of the abdo- men. The fore tibiz are armed with five teeth, of which the two at the apex are the largest, and the four posterior tibize have a spine in the middle of the outer edge of each. Pl. XI. fig. 4. The insect magnified. 4a, the head with one of the antenne ; 46, the eye half divided by the canthus; 4c, maxilla; 4d, mentum; 4e, labium and palpi; 4f, prosternum; 4g, the same sideways.—J. O. W.] Crapocnatuus Nara.ensis ¢ (var. max.), Parry. C. piceo-castaneus; elytris castaneis, sutura tenuissime nigricanti; mandibulis capitis prothoracisque fere longitudine, falcatis, apicibus dilatatis, furcatis, interne spina minima obtusa armatis ; clypeo parvo, binodoso ; capite transverso, cum pro- of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 37 thorace tenuissime granuloso, margine antico deflexo, vix emarginato, pone oculos spina obtusa armato; prothorace capite latiori, angulis posticis obliquis ; elytris prothorace an- gustioribus, sublente minute punctulatis; pedibus, mandibulis, antennisque nigris ; tibiis anticis irregulariter crenulatis, inter- mediis unidentatis, posticis tuberculo minimo instructis. Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 5; mandib, lin, 5. Hab. Port Natal. Allied to C. faber, Thomson, but is at once distinguished by its larger size and less glabrous character ; it differs further in having the mandibles somewhat less curved, the sides of the pro- thorax straighter, and the absence of the small spine at the pos- terior angle. It belongs to that section of the African species of Cladognathus remarkable for the falcate form of the mandibles (which in fully-developed males are only armed at the apex), and in having the head furnished behind the eyes with a small obtuse tooth. The female, as is frequently the case in other allied species of this genus, is more polished than the male, and has considerable affinity to the @ of C. quadridens, Hope, Cat. p. 14. With the exception of a small species of Dorcus, D. adspersus, Boheman, recently described and figured by Professor Westwood (Trans. Ent. Soc., 3rd Ser., i. 435, pl. xvi. fig. 6), this is the only species of Lucanoid Coleoptera received in the numerous collections that have of late been transmitted to us from that rich entomological district of Africa, Port Natal. It appears in some of the continental cabinets under the manuscript name of C. Vescoi. Crapocnatuus Srencit 6, var. max., Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. Xvill. 589. Macrognathus Spencii, Hope, Cat., p. 6. bulbosus 8, var. min., Hope. The above insect, unique in the Hopeian Cabinet, was captured with other interesting species by W. Griffith, Esq., F.L.S., in the Assam district, and placed by the Rev. F. W. Hope in his Cata- logue together with Lucanus bulbosus (also described in Tr. Linn. Soc. xviii. 589), in the sub-genus Macrognathus, immediately preceding the sub-genus Platyprosopus, both of which sub-genera appertain to the family Dorcid@, and are respectively identical with the genera Hemisodorcus and Eurytrachelus of Mr. Thomson’s “Catalogue of the Lucanide.” JL. bulbosus, Hope, a not very 38 Major Parry’s Catalogue uncommon species, has very properly been removed by Mr. Thom- son tothe genus Cladognathus, to which, from its general structure, it has evidently a much nearer affinity, and, as regards the other species, L. Spencii, the typical example of which is now before me, there appears to be but little doubt as to its being the var. max, of L. bulbosus, its chief characteristic consisting in a greater development of the mandibles and head, the former being con- siderably longer than the latter, arcuate, forked at the tip, and exhibiting in a slight degree only at their base the peculiar bulbose structure of the minor form, but still sufficiently apparent to trace the affinity. Individuals of the var. max., or those presenting an extreme development of the mandibles, are but of rare occurrence among their respective species; and as regards C. bulbosus, of which numerous specimens have fallen under my notice, the present case is the only one I have met with. The name of one of our most celebrated Entomologists has been maintained, not only in right of priority of publication, but also in deference to his memory. Gen. Homovervs, Parry. Corpus subrotundatum, robustum, Clypeus transversus, biden- tatus, antice leviter emarginatus. Mandibule capite vix longiores, falcata. Caput magnum, transversum, antice depressum, infra oculos armatum. Antennarum clava 4-ar- ticulata, scaphus elongatus. Prothorax lateribus pone me- dium (in utroque sexu) sinuatis et spina acuta armatis ; angulis anticis rotundatis, posticis emarginatis. Pedes gra- ciles. ‘Tibia posticee in maribus inermes. Homopvervus ME ty, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 107; Trans. Ent. Soc. 3rd Ser. i. 437, pl. xvi. f. 7 & 8 (PI. XI. fig. 6.) Mas.—H. fulvo-testaceus ; mandibulis gracilibus, intus ad basin unidentatis et supra pone medium spinis nodosis tribus aut quatuor irregulariter armatis; capite sublente confertissime granuloso, supra oculos plaga nigra notato; prothorace maculis quatuor nigris, transversim positis, in medio sub- tiliter longitudinaliter canaliculato; elytris levissimis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) fere unc. 2. Hab. Afric. Occ, (Guinea, Old Calabar). In Mus. Parry, Mniszech et Murray. Foem.—H. nigro-fuscus; mandibulis gracilibus, brevibus, ru- goso-punctatis, et dente parvo apicem versus instructis; capite of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 39 irregulariter et fortiter rugoso-punctato; clypeo parvo, ro- tundato; prothorace Juteo, maculis quatuor nigris transver- sim positis, duabus medianis magnis, antice connexis, late- ralibus parvis, rotundatis; elytris singulis vitté lutescenti flava ab humeris ad apicem notatis; pedibus nigris, femo- ribus supra flavo-rufo maculatis; tibiis anticis paulo cur- vatis, extus irregulariter tribus vel quatuor spinis minimis instructis, intermediis posticisque unidentatis. Long. corp. (mandib., incl.) une, 1. In a former communication to the Society, I mentioned the affinity of this insect with Mesotopus Tarandus: subsequent inves- tigation, however, leads me to place it near Cladognathus, and to refer it more particularly to the African species C. faber, C. Na- talensis and C. modestus. It resembles these in having the head broad and armed behind the eyes; the mandibles slender and faleate; the legs likewise slender; the anterior tibize of the females slightly curved and not dilated as in Mesotopus, and the posterior tibize of the males unarmed. Nevertheless, the wide and strongly produced emarginate clypeus, the short, broad form and polished fulvous colour of the elytra, as well as the sinuated character of the sides of the pro- thorax in both sexes, amply justify the creation of the genus pro- posed, which may be placed after Cladognathus. This new and interesting insect was kindly presented to me by Mrs. Melly, and was unique in the magnificent collection of the late Andrew Melly, Esq., of Liverpool, to whose memory I have dedicated it. Another specimen has recently been received by Andrew Murray, Esq., from Old Calabar. CycLoMMATUS METALLIFER, Boisd. Lucanus metallifer, Boisd. Voy. Astrolabe, pl. vi. fig. 20. Cyclommatus eneomicans, Parry, Proc, Ent. Soc., 1862, p. 111. Mas.—C. glabratus, fulvo-zeneo nitens, sublente punctatus ; clypeo concavo, triangulari; capite emarginato, sub vertice depresso, supra oculos angulato; mandibulis falcatis, sub- depressis, capite thoraceque paulo longioribus, denticulis parvis plurimis subapicalibus intus armatis; elytris sub- parallelis; femoribus supra fulvo-striatis ; tibiis inermibus. Long. corp. unc. 1; mandib. lin, 43. Feem.—C, fusco-brunneus, rugoso-punctatus, seneo-tinctus, sub- tus zneus; mandibulis brevibus, infra et supra unidentatis ; elypeo parvo, rotundato; prothorace transverso, lateribus 40 Major Parry’s Catalogue posticis emarginatis; elytris elongatis, subparallelis; femo- ribus supra ut in maribus fulvo-striatis; tiblis quatuor pos- ticis unidentatis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 10. Hab, Batchian ¢, @. Coll. Wallace. Since the publication of my description above referred to, I have ascertained that C. @neomicans is but a minor variety of _ L. metallifer, Boisd. (loc. cit.), the type specimen of which is in the Museum of the Jardin des Plantes; the female, however, had not previously been described. With reference to the armature of the tibize of the females in this genus, Mr. Hope was evidently in error in characterizing them as having the four posterior unarmed (vid. Cat. p. 5); the contrary is found to be invariably the case, each of them being provided with a single spine. Cyctommatus Martianonr 4, Parry (¢ ignota). (Pl. XII. fig. 4.) C. purpureo-zeneus, sparse cinereo-squamosus ; capite maximo ; antennis pedibusque nigris; mandibulis incurvatis, ad basim unidentatis, apicibus furcatis, denticulis 3 vel 4 instructis. Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 2; mandib. lin. 7. Hab. Ins. Nias, (Sumatre occid.) Specimen unicum. Mus. Soc. Zool. Amstelod. The extraordinary size of the head of this species, in com- parison with the prothorax and body, is most remarkable; in this respect it somewhat resembles C. faunicolor, Hope (vid. Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 273), but differs from it and all the other species of the genus by its rich dark purple colour. For the description and figure of this new species I am in- debted to Mr. Maitland, the obliging Curator of the Zoological Society’s establishment at Amsterdam ; it forms part of a very interesting collection of Coleoptera I recently had the pleasure of inspecting under his kind auspices. CycLomMatus AFFINIS 6, Parry (var. med., @ ignota). C, zneo-rufescens, squamulis griseis sparsim tectus; elytris pedibusque fulvescentibus; capite magno, antice depresso, emarginato; mandibulis capite dimidio longioribus, falcatis, apicibus serratis, basi intus dilatatis, processu quadrinodoso armatis, dente minuto medio aliogue majori acuto ante apicem instructis ; prothorace lateribus pone medium angu- of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 41 latis ; tibiis simplicibus, femoribus piceis ; antennis tarsisque nigris; corpore subtus purpureo-zeneo-tincto. Long. corp. unc. 1; mandib. lin. 5. Hab. Borneo et Ins. Philippinis. Allied to both C. Tarandus, Thunb., and C. Mniszechii, Thoms. (comparing specimens of similar development); from the former it is at once distinguished by the pale chestnut and non-zneous colour of the elytra, which are somewhat broader and shorter, and, further, by the totally different armature of the mandibles ; from the latter by its larger head, and shorter and less convex elytra; and, finally, from both by being clothed with griseous scales, in which it assimilates with C. Dehaanii, Westw. I must, however, remark that the sparse distribution of the scales in the specimen described is probably attributable to attrition. There is an insect in the British Museum from the Philippine Islands to be referred to this species. CycLomMAtus INnsiGNIs 6, Parry (var. med., 2 ignota), Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 111. C. fusco- vel rufo-zneus, supra et infra griseo-squamosus ; capite supra triangulariter depresso, margine antico deflexo ; clypeo parvo, conico; mandibulis capite paulo longioribus, denticulis parvis subapicalibus intus armatis, et prope basin denticulo binodoso instructis; prothorace capite angustiori, Jateribus infra in medio angulatis; elytris subparallelis, re- gulariter quadricostatis, humeris subproductis ; tibiis anticis obsolete unidentatis, posticis inermibus. Long. corp. lin. 10 ; mandib. lin. 4, Hab. Oriente. This insect belongs to the second section of the genus, which may be characterized as “ griseo-squamose;” it approximates somewhat in general appearance to C. Dehaanii, Westwood, from which, however, the peculiar sculpture of the elytra, as well as the armature of the mandibles, readily distinguish it. Cycrorasis Jexextit ¢, Parry (var. max.), (PI. IX. fig. 4.) C. subparallelus, supra olivaceo-viridis, subtus nigro-piceo- zeneus, dense punctulatus ; mandibulis porrectis, capite paulo longioribus, lateribus interne excavatis, serrato-dentatis, api- cibus recurvis, acute bifureatis; capite antice emarginato, ante oculos angulato, acuto, producto; prothorace transverso- quadrato, lateribus fere rectis, angulis posticis fortiter emar- ginatis; elytris prothorace paulo angustioribus; antennis 42 Major Parry’s Catalogue pedibusque piceo-zeneis; tibiis anticis 4-5-dentatis, inter- mediis medio dente acuto armatis, posticis inermibus. Long. corp. unc. 1; mandib. lin. 3, Hab. Chowsan (Corea). This interesting new species is allied to C. platycephalus, Hope (vid. Westw. Or. Ent. p. 17, pl. villi. fig. 2), but is abundantly distinct; it differs in the form of its mandibles (which in C. pla- tycephalus are of a peculiar structure, and described by Professor Westwood as being short and palmated), and in its elongate nar- row elytra, which are also more strongly punctured. The ¢, as in C. platycephalus, is of a darker colour than the é, and, com- pared with the same sex of that species, presents the following differences: the head is broader, with the vertex depressed, more sparsely punctuate, the angle in front of the eye more produced, the two nodose elevations on the centre being entirely wanting ; the prothorax is also wider and less punctate, and the elytra longer and less convex. The Rev. F. W. Hope in his Catalogue refers C. platycephalus to his sub-genus Cyclophthalmus ; Mr. Thomson has, however, appropriately made it the type of his new genus Cyclorasis, whereof we are now acquainted with three distinct species. The above insect originally formed part of Mr. J. C. Bowring’s rich collection, and has been named after M. Jekel, the well known author of a Catalogue of the Curculionidae, Cyctorasis suBNITENS 6, Parry (@ ignota), Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862 epee eel VU fige is) C. glaberrimus, cinnamomeus, minute punctulatus; mandibulis brevibus, subrecurvis, intus obtuse 6 vel 7-denticulatis, api- cibus subfurcatis; capite supra oculos angulato. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 9. Hab, Ind. Or. Coll. Parry. Of an elongate form, the elytra being much longer than the head, thorax and mandibles taken together; shining, of a polished cinnamon brown, with a faint brassy tinge. Mandibles short, recurved, forked at the tip with from 6 to 7 minute teeth on the inner edge. Head, thorax and elytra minutely punctured, lateral margins of prothorax slightly reflexed ; scutellum blackish-brown. Tibiz of fore legs crenulated externally, the four posterior un- armed. Allied to C. platycephalus, but differs in the form of the man- dibles, and in the anterior angles of the head being much less acute, The elytra are also narrower and more elongate. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 43 Lertinorrervs Fry: ¢, Parry (var. max., ¢ ignota). (PI. VII. fig. 4.) Psalidostomus Fryi, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 112, L. niger; thorace elytrisque pilis cinereis brevibus adspersis ; capite antice subemarginato et elevato, supra oculos oblique truncato; mandibulis gracilibus, porrectis, leviter falcatis, intus irregulariter dentatis; prothorace transverso, antice angusto et dense aureo-fulvo ciliato, angulis posticis valde acutis; scutello pilis aureo-fulvis tecto ; tibiis anticis tri- dentatis, posticis inermibus. Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 2; mandib. lin. 7. Hab. Braz. Prov. Cantagallo (specimen unicum). Coll, Dom. Fry olim, nunc in Coll. Parry. Black. Mandibles, bead and prothorax somewhat shining; elytra dull, the left mandible with four teeth, the tips gradually incurved and pointed, the right mandible with three teeth only. Prothorax with two slight foveze near the front margin and a slighter one behind on the median line, wider than the elytra, the sides ex- tending obliquely outwards to the posterior angle, which is very prominent, the whole of the anterior margin and the middle of the posterior fringed with tawny golden hairs, extending in the latter over nearly the whole of the scutellum, the surface minutely punctured, more or less covered with short grey hairs. Elytra dull, minutely punctured, and also covered with short grey hairs ; tip of elytra depressed, humeral angles prominent, and armed with an obtuse spine. Tibiz with longitudinal lines of points, the anterior short, and armed with three teeth externally, and minutely serrulated towards the apex; the tarsi clothed beneath with golden hairs; the under-side of the prothorax fringed in front and behind with short, yellowish-rufous hairs. In the great width and dilatation of the posterior angles of the prothorax, this insect approaches somewhat to the genus Chiasog- nathus. I am indebted to A, Fry, Esq., the possessor of a fine collection of Brazilian Coleoptera, for being enabled to give the description of it, and through his kindness it now forms part of my own collection, LEPTINOPTERUS ROTUNDATUs ¢, Parry(@ ignota). (PI. VII. fig. 8.) Psalidostomus rotundatus, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 112. Dorcus pachygnathus, MS. Mus. Berol. L. ferrugineus, nigro-marginatus ; capite magno, lateribus pone oculos unituberculatis; mandibulis brevibus, curvatis, api- 44 Major Parry’s Catalogue cibus furcatis, medio supra dente valido armatis ; prothorace capite latiori, angulis posticis obliquis ; elytris brevibus, paulo convexis; tibiis anticis extus serrulatis, intermediis spina minuta armatis, posticis inermibus. Long. corp. lin. 6; mandib. lin. fere 2. Hab. Amer. merid. (Braz.?). Coll. Mus. Berol. et Parry. Of a dark ferruginous brown. Head, prothorax, lateral margins and suture of the elytra blackish ; head wide, emarginate in front, armed behind the eyes with a small spine; mandibles short, but thick, hollowed on the inside, a little longer than the head, rounded on the underside, forked at the tip, and furnished in the centre, above, with a stout erect tooth. Elytra minutely punctate, narrowly black at the base, very convex. Scutellum blackish- brown; femora pale ferruginous, tips black, tibize also blackish, those of the fore legs toothed and denticulated ; the intermediate tibize with a single spine, the posterior unarmed. I am indebted to the late Dr. Klug for the specimen I possess. The insect is in the Museum of Berlin under the MS. name of Dorcus pachygnathus. Macrocrates Bucernatus ¢, Burm. (PI. X. fig: 9.) @ Dohrn, Ent. Zeit. 1862, p. 135. A description of the 2 of the above species has only lately been published by the well-known Entomologist Herr Dohrn of Stettin; there is a single specimen (the only one, I believe, in this country) in the Hopeian Collection at Oxford, with the name of (nigripes, Dej. Cat.) attached to it. This specimen having belonged to the collection of Mons. Gory, it is reasonable to suppose the synonymy to be correct, more especially as Count Dejean places the species in the genus Psalicerus, a genus closely allied to Macrocrates. Mr. Thomson, in his Catalogue, refers however P. nigripes, Dej., to P. morio, Burm. Hemisoporcus Passatores, Hope. (PI. X. fig. 4 $.) Dorcus passaloides, Hope, Cat. pp. 6, 24 @. H. (var. minor ¢) angustus, subparallelus, rufo-piceo obscurus ; mandibulis capitis longitudine, interne regulariter 4-dentatis, apicibus acutis; clypeo transverso, 4-dentato; capite pro- thoraceque sparse et grosse punctatis ; prothorace lateribus rectis, nec sinuatis, angulis anticis rotundatis, posticis ob- liquis ; elytris angustis, subparallelis, crebre fortiterque punce of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 45 tatis; tibiis anticis extus 4 vel 5-dentatis, quatuor posticis spina minuta instructis. Long corp. (mandib. incl.) lin, 94. Hab. Borneo et Java. Although no mention of the sex is made in the Rey. Mr. Hope’s description of this species, it proves upon examination of the type- specimen to represent the female. Whether the given habitat of Java is correct admits perhaps of some doubt, as specimens of both sexes have lately been received from Borneo, and no other specimen from Java has ever fallen under my notice; it may, however, notwithstanding be indigenous to both islands, The male is now for the first time described and figured. In general form and structure of its mandibles, this species assimilates somewhat to Eurytrachelus, differing however in its narrow subparallel form, and in having the lateral margins non- sinuate; in this respect being more in accordance with Hemiso- dorcus, Thoms., in which for the present it is located, with (Cladog- nathus) gracilis, Saund., and piceipennis, Westw. Gen. Drromoprrus,* Parry. Corpus Jatum, depressum, elytris politis. Caput transversum, antice late emarginatum, in medio tuberculo conico armatum, Jateribus pone oculos haud rotundato-dilatatis. Oculi cantho dimidiatim incisi. Clypeus parvus, deflexus, subquadratus, antice rotundatus, leviter concavus. Antenne breyes, clava 4-articulata. Mandibule elongate depressz, ad basin for- titer dilatate; dente valido obtuso prope basin marginis interni, tuberculo parvo pone medium, alteroque subapicali, apice ipso intus subito curvato. Prothorax latus, lateribus rotundato-dilatatis, supra profunde longitudinaliter sulcatis, marginibus simplicibus. Tibia anticee extus multi-serrate ; quatuor posticze in medio denticulo unico armate. Genus Eurytrachelo affine. Diromopervs miraBiLis ¢, Parry. (PI. XII. fig. 6.) D. niger; capite, prothorace, mandibulisque tenuissime granu- losis, subopacis; elytris nigro-castaneis, glabris, nitidis, late- ribus punctatissimis, punctis rufo-setulosis; jugulo prope basin menti punctis duobus profundis impresso ; mandibulis porrectis, depressis, capitis prothoracisque longitudine, in- terne ad basin dente magno obtuso reflexo armatis, ante * Alc, réuos, déen; in allusion to the two deep longitudinal incisions on the lateral margins of the prothorax, 46 Major Parry’s Catalogue medium spina minima alteraque pone apicem instructis; clypeo angusto, deflexo; capite magno, transverso, antice emarginato, clypeo in medio supra tuberculato; prothorace transverso, capite elytrisque multo latiori, lateribus profunde sulcatis, angulis anticis rotundatis (nec sinuatis ut in gen. Lurytrachelo), posticis obliquis, medio leviter longitudinaliter canaliculatis ; elytris subtiliter punctulatis, lateribus squamulis cinereis tectis; tibiis anticis irregulariter denticulatis, 4 pos- ticis spina minima instructis; corpore subtus, femoribus, tibiis, tarsisque plus miusve squamulosis. Long. corp. unc. 1, lin. 7 ; mandib. lin. 8. Hab. Borneo. Coll. Wallace et Parry. For the figure of this species, and the following remarks, I am indebted to Prof. Westwood.* {This curious insect differs so much from the other groups of Lucanide as to have rendered necessary the establishment of a new genus (a sub-genus) for its reception. Whilst in general aspect it bears a strong resemblance to the large flat Indian Platyprosopi, &c., it differs from them all in the 4-jointed clava of its antennee and dilated sides of the prothorax ; from P. Anteus, Hope, &c., it is distinguished by the structure of the anterior emarginate part of the head, and the peculiar denticulation of the flattened mandibles. From QOdontolabis (L. Rafflesii, Hope, &c.) it differs in having a spine in the middle of each of the middle and posterior tibize. Pl. XII. fig. 6. The insect of the natural size ; 6a, the clypeus and central tubercle of the front of the head ; 6b, the eye half divided by the canthus ; 6c, terminal joints of the antenne; 6d, maxilla; 6e, mentum and palpi.—J. O. W.] Evurytracuetus Tiryus, Hope, Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 74. LE, Chevrolatii, Thoms. Ann. Soc. Ent, Fr. 1862, p. 308. semirugosus (var. minor), ib. 422. The present species was described from a specimen then unique in my own collection by the Rev. F. W. Hope, in a paper read to the Society in the year 1842, upon several new species of Coleoptera from the Kasyah Hills collected by Dr. Cantor, and until a very recent period did not form part of the Hopeian Col- lection ; hence the species was not recorded in Mr. Hope’s Cata- logue of Lucanida. It has, however, been received of later years somewhat abundantly in collections forwarded from the above- named district of India. * See note *, ante, p. 17. ee of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 47 Upon a recent visit to several of the chief collections of Cole- optera on the continent, I ascertained that Dorcus Tilyus was there represented as being the D. Chevrolati, Hope, Ann. Nat. Hist. xii. 364, and Cat. pp. 20 and 6; this is evidently erroneous, the type of D. Chevrolatii, which is now before me, proving to be a var. max. of Dorcus Saiga, Olivier. There ought to be no mistaking the two species, according to the description of the mandibles of D. Chevrolatii, “ arcuatis, in medio intus lato dente armatis, et pone hunc setosis” (vid. Cat. p. 20). This last cha- racter is not alluded to in the description of D. Tityus ; it most decidedly does not exist in the insect itself, and is peculiar to D. Saiga, D. cribriceps, Chevr., and D. purpurascens, Voll., all three species belonging to the genus Lurytrachelus of Mr. ‘Thomson, Having examined the type specimen of E. semirugosus, Thom- son, Cat. p. 422, I have no hesitation in regarding it as the var. min. of #. Tityus. EurytracHetus Tuomsont ¢, Parry. E. niger, tenuiter granulatus, subopacus, depressus; capite lato transverso, antice depresso, emarginato, tenuissime gra- nuloso, pone oculos inflato ; mandibulis intus ad basin excisis, capite duplo longioribus, gracilibus, leviter curvatis, spinis duabus parvis obtusis, una ad basin alteraque prope medium instructis ; clypeo prominulo, transverso, antice emarginato, obtuse bidentato ; prothorace transverso, capite latiori, lateri- bus pone angulos anticos sinuatis, angulis posticis obtusis, linea media longitudinali laevi notato ; elytris dorso lzevissimo, prothorace angustioribus, disco nitido, sublente punctulato, lateribus subtilissime coriaceis, subopacis, angulis humeralibus productis; tibiis brevibus, anticis extus irregulariter den- ticulatis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. lin. 13 ; mandib. lin, 6. Hab. Ins. Moluce. The present species was collected by Mr, Wallace, and is allied to E. Ceramensis, Thomson (vid. Cat. p. 424), but which is pro- bably identical with D. concolor, Blanchard. The general colour of E. Thomsoni is of a somewhat polished black (and not, as in Ceramensis and concolor, rufo-piceous), with the dise of the elytra remarkably shining, contrasting strongly with the remainder of the insect ; whereas, in the allied species alluded to, the colour of the insect is uniform, the sculpture being granulose and opaque. The tibice appear also to be shorter, with the tarsi more slender; the 48 Major Parry’s Catalogue clypeus is of a totally different form, being considerably broader and more deeply emarginate ; and, finally, the mandibles interiorly are strongly excised at their base. I have much pleasure in dedicating this species to James Thomson, Esq., of Paris, the well-known American entomologist. Evryrracnetus (Dorcus) Axis $, Dej. Cat. p. 193 (var. minor). Lucanus Bucephalus 8, Perty, Col. Ind. Or. 36, pl. 1. fig. 5. (var. max.) Through the kindness of Mr. James Thomson, who has placed at my disposal for examination several interesting types of species belonging to the late Count Dejean’s Collection, as well as of others lately described by himself in the Catalogue of Lucanidz and forming part of his own rich collection, I am enabled to clear up many points of interest with reference to the synonymy of certain species. As regards D. Axis , there can be no doubt, as already noted by Dr. Burmeister (vid. Handb. v. 385), that it is the var. minor of D. Bucephalus 8, Perty, also from Java; but I do not feel disposed to agree with M. Reiche (vid. Ann. Soe. Ent. Fr. Ser. 3, i. 79) as to its identity with D. eurycephalus, Burm. Handb. v. 387, the description of the following characters in the Jatter species exhibiting such a marked difference from D. Amis as to render the identity of the two species most improbable. They are as follows:—the mandibles are described as forked at the apex, and armed interiorly with two to three teeth placed at sepa- rate intervals, the interior sides clothed partially with a thick silky pubescence (as in LZ, Sazga), and the antennz want the two slender hairy filaments preceding the clava, which are prominently to be recognized in D. Aais, Titan, Saiga and other species of this group. M. Reiche (ubi sup.) is probably correct in regarding D, eury- cephalus, Burm., as identical with Z. Bubalus, Perty. This latter species is referred to by Burmeister as the var. min. both of D. Bucephalus and of D. Saiga (vid. Handb. v. 385, 388). I have not seen the type specimens of either Bubalus, Perty, or Euryce- phalus, Burm., and feel doubtful whether they are a distinct species, or only the var. min. of one of the allied species. M. Reiche further states the 9 of D. Axis to be D. exaratus, Dej. Coll. Count Dejean’s specimen of the latter now belongs to Mr. Thomson's Collection, and was lately described by that gentleman in his Catalogue of Lucanide, p. 426; it is now before me, and is clearly identical with Dorcus lineatopunctatus of Mr. Hope’s Collection, described in his Catalogue, p. 23; of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 49 but whether it may be regarded as a distinct or as the minor variety of an allied species appears to me uncertain, not being acquainted with a sufficient number of specimens to enable me to form any decided opinion for the present. I incline to regard it as the var. min, of LZ. Tityus, Hope. EvuryTRACHELUS SAIGA. Lucanus Saiga, Oliv. Ins. I. i. 29, 19, tab. v. fig. 18 (¢). Dorcus Saiga, Burm. Handb. v. 387. Lucanus inermis, Fab. Syst. El. ii. 251, 17 (2? sec. Burm. 1. c.). Dorcus inermis, Hope, Cat. p. 6 (@ ). In reference to the citation of the LZ. inermis of Fabricius as sy- nonymous with the present species, I would offer the following remarks, prefacing them with that author’s description. L, mandibulis exsertis, inermibus, capitis thoracisque lateribus punctatis. Hab. Sumatra, Statura et summa affinitas Z. parallelepipedi, at mandibule in- ermes ; caput punctatum; thorax dorso levi nitido, lateribus punctatis ; elytra subpunctata; corpus nigrum. Dr. Burmeister is evidently of opinion that the species in question is a female, and belongs to the family Dorcide. The mandibles, however, are so distinctly described as ‘“ exsertis inermibus,” and such a structure is so utterly at variance with the general character of the females of this family, which are in- variably found to be provided with a small internal tooth on their mandibles, that considerable doubt arises whether Dr. Burmeister’s opinion that the Fabrician imermis is the female of D. Saiga, Oliv., is correct. M. Reiche, in his critique upon Dr. Burmeis- ter’s work (vid. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. vol. i. Ser. 3, p. 80), holds a contrary opinion. The specimen in the Hopeian Collection was received from Mr. Westermann of Copenhagen as inermis, Fab., and proves upon examination to be identical with the female of D. Saiga, thus supporting Dr. Burmeister’s conclusion. If the determination of the species by Mr. Westermann were founded upon an actual comparison with a specimen of it in the old Fa- brician Collection (still existing, I believe, in the Museum at Copenhagen), it is manifest that the original description would be erroneous, as a small tooth is unquestionably present in the insect received from Copenhagen. It must, however, be remem- bered that Mr. M‘Leay, in his Hor. Ent., cites Luc. inermis, Fab., as belonging to the genus Agus, although no allusion to it VOL, II, THIRD SERIES, PART I.— MAY, 1864, E 50 Major Parry’s Catalogue is made by Messrs. Hope, Burmeister or Reiche. In this re- spect I feel disposed to agree with Mr. M‘Leay; and, although unable to determine the species, have placed it in the catalogue with the genus di gus. Dorcus Ktuen ¢, Thomson, Cat. p. 424. After a careful examination of a series of specimens of the above insect from Assam, I feel satisfied that it must be con- sidered as the var. max. of D. Dehaani, the ¢ and Q of which species were originally described by Mr. Hope in the Trans, Linn. Soc. vol. xix. p. 106; the latter name will therefore be retained. The punctate-striate character of the elytra in the females of the genus, of which the small undeveloped males par- take, is strongly illustrated in D. Dehaanii. Some faint traces of this character are to be remarked in the var. max., described for the first time by Mr. J. Thomson. Dorcus DERELICTUS (?), Parry. D. elongatus, niger, nitidus; capite inter oculos bituberculato; mandibulis obsolete unidentatis; elytris lzvissimis, sub- parallelis ; tibiis posterioribus extus subcurvatis, inermibus, intermediis unidentatis. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) unc. J, lin. 5. Hab. ind. Or, Himalaya. Coll. Parry. Elongate and narrow; mandibles shorter than the head, slightly curved, grooved above with a small tooth within near the apex. Head excavated and punctured in front, smooth behind; between the eyes are two very prominent conical tubercles. Clypeus prominent, triangularly emarginate. Prothorax and elytra of the same width, indistinctly but coarsely punctured on the sides. Scutellum triangular, sparsely punctate. The anterior and pos- terior tibize slightly curved, the latter unarmed. While, on the one hand, the general form and tuberculated head of the only specimen of the present species which has hitherto come under my notice are almost essentially characteristic of the female sex appertaining to this genus, on the other hand, the slender anterior, and the unarmed posterior, tibiz are so utterly anomalous, as to leave some doubt whether it be really a female, or a male with short undeveloped mandibles ; an acquaintance with both sexes might perhaps remove it to the genus Eurytra- chelus ; for the present I have placed it with Dorcus. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 51 Dorcus MAzAMA @, Leconte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Science, Philadelp. 1861, p. 345. Lucanus mazama, 1d., Classification Coleopt. N. America, p. 120. D. mazama &, nigro-piceus; capite punctato, thorace vix angustiore; mandibulis apice acutis, dente parvo medio armatis, thorace latitudine plus duplo breviore, postice an- gustiore, lateribus medio obtuse angulatis, angulis posticis rectis, disco modice versus latera sat dense punctato; elytris modice punctatis, subtiliter rugosis; tibiis anticis 4-dentatis, et dente superiori obsoleto munitis, tibiis pos- terioribus dentibus 3 lateralibus apicalique acutis armatis. Long. (mandib. excl.) une. 1°20. Hab. N. Mexico. In Mus. Dom. Leconte. Dorcus? turrus, Westw., Tr. Ent. Soc., N.S., iii. 218, pl. xi. fig. 4, The above named insect was described by Professor Westwood from the collection of the Rev. F. W. Hope, who obtained it from that of M. Gory, with the habitat of New Holland. If the speci- men I lately inspected in the Hopeian Museum at Oxford is the insect in question, and I have but little doubt of its being the original type, it must be quite evident that some confusion has arisen with reference to the locality, as I believe it to be iden- tical with Agus cicatrosus 2, of Wiedemann, a not uncommon insect from Java, which is the female of gus acuminatus of Fabricius, GNAPHALORYX DILATICOLLIs ¢, Parry. G. nigro-piceus, opacus, squamulis griseo-luteis vestitus ; capite magno, transverso, lateribus pone oculos dente obtuso armatis ; clypeo transverso, late emarginato; mandibulis capitis longitu- dine, gracilibus, leviter curvatis, pone medium tuberculo ob- tuso suberecto, et denticulo minuto deflexo armatis, apicibus acutis ; prothorace transverso, capite elytrisque multo latiori, basim versus angustato, medio longitudinaliter canaliculato, angulis anticis prominulis, rotundatis, posticisque oblique truncatis, lateribus fere rectis; elytris elongatis, subcon- vexis, costis 10 elevatis, interstitiis planis; corpore subtus squamoso; tibiis anticis minute tuberculatis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Hab. Archip. Ind. ? Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 11. Coll. Parry. Specimen unicum. E 2 52 Major Parry’s Catalogue Allied to G. squalidus, Hope, but readily distinguished from that species by its more elongate and convex form, its broader prothorax, with the anterior angles more produced, and by the strongly marked costate sculpture of its elytra. Its true habitat is uncertain, but I believe it to be from the Indian Archipelago. GNAPHALORYX SCULPTIPENNIS @, Parry. G. niger, opacus, squamulis griseis erectis dense vestitus ; capite transverso, prothorace paulo angustiori, angulis posticis acutis ; mandibulis capite paulo brevioribus, inermibus, apice falcatis, intus ad basin dilatatis, edentatis ; prothorace trans- verso, medio obsolete longitudinaliter canaliculato, lateribus fere rectis, angulis posticis oblique truncatis; elytris brevibus, apicem versus convexis, fortius sed irregulariter costatis, interstitiis dense et minute punctatis; corpore subtus nigro, leviter squamuloso ; pedibus piceis, hirsutis; tibiis inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 8. Hab. N. Guinea. Coll. Mus. Lugdun. et Parry. From the short unarmed mandibles, the above species may possibly represent only a var. minor; in more fully developed individuals, the mandibles, as in all the species of this genus, will probably be found to be denticulated ; in all other characters it evidently belongs to this genus. I am indebted to Professor Dehaan, of Leyden, for its possession. Aicus cicatricosus, Wiedemann, Zool. Mag. II. i. 108 (Lucanus). From the description of this species there is no doubt (although no allusion is made to the sex) of its representing a ¢, and there is further every reason to suppose that Dr. Burmeister is correct in referring it to Ag. acuminatus, Fabricius. Count Dejean, in his Catalogue, regards it as a distinct species, and M. Reiche takes the same view (vid. Ann. Soc. Ent. Ser. 3, vol. i. p. 82), stating both sexes to be in Count Dejean’s Collection, but I am not aware upon what ground M. Reiche supposes the ¢ to which he alludes to be that of cicatricosus of Wiedemann, considering that one sex only is described by that author, and that, as already stated, is evidently the @. I have now before me the typical specimen of Count Dejean’s Collection (belonging to Mr. James Thomson); it is the var. minor of Agus chelifer, M‘Leay, from the Malay Peninsula. The locality of Java assigned to Count Dejean’s specimen is, I I have no doubt, erroneous; I am acquainted with many large of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 53 collections possessing long series of the various species of Agus from Java, but I have never yet detected Agus chelifer of M‘Leay as coming from that island. ‘cus tunatus, Weber, Obs. Ent. i. 83, 1. (Luc.), Sumatra. Fab. Syst. El. ii. 252, 19. Sumatra. Burm. Handb, der Ent. v. 400. Sumatra and Java. As regards the descriptions of Weber and Fabricius of this insect, their extreme conciseness precludes the possibility of re- cognizing with any certainty the species alluded to, the habitat Sumatra being given by both authors; Dr. Burmeister, 1. ¢., records the species as distinct, from Java as well as from Sumatra, placing it next acuminatus of Fabricius, which belongs to that sec- tion of A’ gus having the head in front (in fully developed males) armed with a tubercle; according to Dr. Burmeister’s description, this character does not exist, and the insect in question must be considered as an undeveloped male, but whether to be referred to Agus acuminatus of Fabricius or to be considered as a distinct species is, I think, somewhat problematical. The extraordinary variation of character exhibited in a series of specimens of the same species in this genus renders it most perplexing to recognize with any certitude their identity from description only. ZEcus Kanpiensts, Hope, Cat. p. 6. The type specimen in the Hopeian Collection (% var. minor) is referred by Mr. Hope in his Catalogue as a variety of 4. ctca- tricosus, Wiedemann. (‘The insect in Mr. Hope’s Collection under the name of cicatricosus, Wiedemann, appears to be only the var. minor of acuminatus, Fabricius.) Having examined a nu- merous series of the various developments of this insect from Ceylon, as well as others closely allied to it from the Philippines and Borneo, I find so much affinity existing in general character with such a perplexing variability of sculpture, that it is almost impossible to arrive at any definite conclusion as to whether the specimens from Ceylon, Borneo and the Philippines are to be considered as geographical varieties of 4g. acuminatus of Fa- bricius, or to be regarded as distinct to be united under the name of Kandiensis, There is certainly one character to be remarked in the numerous specimens examined, viz., that the interior tooth of the mandibles (which appears to exist in all fully developed males of this section of the genus) is placed slightly above the centre and not near the base as in 4g. acuminatus ; in this respect 54 Major Parry’s Catalogue it accords with 2g. chelifer (var. max.), but is readily distinguished from this species by the strong and coarsely punctured lateral margins of the elytra. Under the circumstances I have united the Ceylon, Philippine and Bornean insects under the name of Kandiensis, Hope. /Aicus CHELIFER, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 113. A specimen of this insect is in the British Museum, received from Mr. M‘Leay, with the habitat of Australia on the label; I have always had considerable doubt as to the locality, no other recorded specimen from that continent having ever fallen under my notice; and I am now convinced that the habitat given is erroneous, for the insect has recently been received with its various developments by Count Mniszech and myself, both from Cambodia and the Malay Peninsula,* and proves upon comparison to be identical with Mr. M‘Leay’s species in the British Museum. The insect described by Mr. M‘Leay evidently represents the var. minor of the species, but specimens of the var. max. have been received from the localities above stated, possessing the tuberculated front to the head as noticed in Ag. acuminatus (in minor developed specimens this process totally disappears), the mandibles being also armed in their interior with a tooth, but placed invariably slightly above the centre and not near the base as in acuminatus; the sides of the elytra are also apparently smooth, whereas in the var. max. of acuminatus they are strongly punctate. Allusion has been already made (ante, p. 52) to the identity of this species with Agus cicatricosus 6 of Mr. Thom- son’s Collection (olim Dejean), and to the uncertainty, as men- tioned in Dejean’s Catalogue, of Java being its true locality. The insect in the Faune de I'Ie de Woodlark, p. 27, under the name of Agus chelifer?, M‘Leay, probably represents the var. minor either of 4g. insipidus, Thomson, or of platyodon, Parry, both species having been recently received rather abundantly from New Guinea and Celebes. fEcus LaBitis, Westw. (Pl. XII. fig. 5.) [Dorcus labilis, Westw.} JE. latus, depressus, niger, capite et pronoto subopacis, elytris glabris, striato-punctatis ; capite antice in medio emarginato, * Nigidius cornutus, M‘Leay, stated to be from Australia, has been received also from the now mentioned localities. Vide post, p. 63. t See note* ante, p. 17, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 55 angulis acutis; mandibulis capite dimidio longioribus, dente parvo interno basali, altero magno paulo pone medium oblique porrecto, armatis; capitis disco versus angulos anticos obtuse bituberculato, maxillarum lobo valde elon- gato, Long. corp. lin, 154; mandib. lin. 6; prothoracis latitudo, lin. 7. Habitat in India orient. septentr., Darjeeling. Mus. Parry. The general colour is black, the elytra alone having a slightly pitchy tinge. The head and pronotum are very delicately granu- lose, and consequently subopaque ; the elytra glossy, with rather deep striae formed of confluent punctures. The head and pro- notum especially are much flattened. The fore margin of the former is rather deeply emarginate in the middle, the emargi- nation terminating in a produced point at each end, beyond which the front of the head is nearly straight, the lateral angles rounded off, the canthus cutting the eye into two parts (fig. 5a), and the sides of the head behind the eyes slightly produced into a rounded tubercle; between the eye and the frontal spine is, on each. side, a small rounded but very slightly raised tubercle on the dise of the head. The clypeus is quite simple in the middle; the man- dibles are half an inch in length, they are armed near the base on the inner edge with a small conical tooth, and rather beyond the middle with a strong tooth porrected obliquely forwards. The mentum is very broad and short, deeply emarginate in the middle, where it is depressed so as to meet the depressed centre of the clypeus and close the mouth in front ; the sides, however, are sufli- ciently open to allow the extraordinarily developed outer flattened lobe of the maxillz to lie exposed on the underside of the base of the mandibles, figure 5c representing the mentum with the exposed lobes of the two maxille, the maxillary palpi and the terminal joint of the labial palpi in situ; whilst fig. 5d represents the Jabium and labial palpi detached from the inner side of the mentum, the palpi even here being of unusual elongation. This structure I have observed in no other Lucanideous insect to such an extent as here occurs. The antenne have the 7th joint pro- duced into a point on the inner edge and armed with a bristle; the three terminal joints are short and broad. The dise of the head behind the eyes and along the posterior margin is finely punctured ; the prothorax is wider than the head, the lateral mar- gins nearly parallel, armed near the anterior angles with a small prominent angular projection; the sides, as well as the anterior and posterior margins, are strongly punctured ; in the middle is a slightly impressed and punctured space, and within each of the 56 Major Parry’s Catalogue posterior angles is an oval polished patch. The elytra and scu- tellum are punctured at the base; the former are punctate-striate, the 2nd and 7th, 3rd and 4th, and also the Sth and 6th strie being united at their extremities. The anterior tibiz are serrated along the outer margin, with two strong teeth at the apex; the middle tibiae are armed with two spines, and the posterior ones with a single spine in the middle of the outer edge. This species is most nearly allied to Dorcus capitatus,* Westw. (Trans. Ent. Soc. iv. 275), but differs from the large males of that species in the much-advanced position of the strong tooth of the mandibles, and in the very slight development of the tubercle on each side of the disc of the head before the eyes ; agreeing in this respect with D. parallelus, Hope (Cat. Lucan.), from the Khasyah Hills, whilst Major Parry’s insect is from Darjeeling. The D. parallelus is indeed considered by Major Parry to be a small variety of D. capitatus; but the latter is from Malacca and Prince of Wales’ Island, and I should be inclined to regard D. parallelus rather as the varietas minor of D, labilis. D. sinister (Hope, Cat. Lucan.), also from Prince of Wales’ Island, is, doubt- less, the female of D. capitatus, as Major Parry suggests. 1 have also scarcely any doubt that the female insect named D. Malaba- ricus (Hope, MS.; Westw. Trans. Ent. Soc. iv. 276) is identical with D. sinister ; and in like manner I also consider that D. equals (Hope, MS.; Westw. Trans. Ent. Soc. iv. 276) is most probably identical with D. parallelus, D. labilis is also closely allied to D. Eschscholtzii, Hope, but that is a considerably smaller insect, with a more polished upper surface, the anterior lateral angles of the head destitute of tubercles, and the pronotum destitute of the punctured impression in the middle. P]. XII. fig. 5. The insect of the natural size; 5a, the eye entirely divided by the canthus ; 4b, maxilla; 5c, the mentum, lobes of maxille and palpi; 5d, labium and its palpiimJ. O. W.] Ecus PLATyopon 6, Parry (var. max.) (Pl. X. fig. 1.) AE. niger, parum nitidus; mandibulis falcatis, ad basin dente magno trifido armatis; capite magno, transverso, antice in medio profunde emarginato; elytris punctato-striatis ; scutello sparsim et fortiter punctato; tibiis anticis serratis denticulis * In the description and figure of this species in the 4th volume of these Transactions, the middle tib:z are described as possessing only a single spine on the outer edge. They, however, agree ia this respect with D. labilis, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 57 6 aut 7 armatis, intermediis 4—5, posticisque 2 spinis mini- mis instructis. Long. corp. lin. 13; mandib. lin. 4. Hab. Ins. Gilolo. Coll. Wallace, Saunders, Bare Mandibles faleate, broad at the base, within which is a large tridentate process, and thence gradually narrowed to the tip. Head broad, slightly depressed, deeply emarginate in front; the angles of the emargination acute and obliquely prominent, and, like the mandibles, delicately shagreened, with indistinct scattered punctures, which are somewhat coarser on the sides and behind the eyes. Prothorax smooth anteriorly; the sides and hinder margin with coarse punctures ; lateral margins straight ; posterior angles much rounded. Scutellum Sanies with a few deep punc- tures. Elytra with the shoulders acutely angular; base and _Jateral margins with deep punctures; dorsal surface depressed, each with eight deep, longitudinal, punctate strize ; the interstices sparsely and obsoletely punctate. Head, prothorax and abdomen coarsely punctured beneath. This species, like all others of this genus, varies considerably in size, and the remarkable tridentate process at the base of the mandibles is entirely wanfmg in those of a minor development. /Ecus BLanvus ¢, Parry. ZE. subparallelus, niger; labro parvo, bidentato ; capite magno, antice emarginato, subtilissime granulato, opaco, postice nitido, pone oculos in spina obtusa producto, et fortius conflu- enter punctato; mandibulis capite brevioribus, arcuatis, spina obtusa prope basin armatis; prothorace transverso, nitido, sub disco sparse punctulato, lateribus rectis, ruguloso-punc- tatis, angulis posticis obliquis ; elytris nitidis, striatis, inter- stitiis planis, lateribus punctulatis ad apicem attenuatis; tibiis anticis 4 vel 5 spinis armatis, intermediis unidentatis, posticis inermibus; corpore subtus punctulatis; pedibus tarsisque infra plus minusve ciliatis. Long. corp. lin. 10; mandib. lin. 23. Hab. Ins. Salwatty, N. Guinea. There is but little doubt, from the shortness of the mandibles in comparison with the size and general appearance of the insect, that the former have not in the present instance attained their full development, and that in other specimens they will probably be found to be of a different character. In the female the mandibles are armed in the middle with a triangular tooth; the head and prothorax deeply and coarsely punctured, the anterior tibize being strongly dilated towards the apex, 58 Major Parry’s Catalogue ZEcus punctipennis 6, Parry (var. max.) £. nitidus, capite magno, cepresso, parce fortiterque punctato, antice emarginato ; mandibulis falcatis, capite haud longiori- bus, intus prope basin dente valido armatis; prothorace transverso, nitido, tenuissime punctulato, in medio longitudina- liter impresso; elytris striatis, crebre profundeque punctatis. Long. corp. lin. 13 ; mandib. lin. 3. Hab. Borneo. Coll. Wallace et Parry. The above new species is allied to Agus platyodon (ante, p. 56), differing, however, in the head being much more depressed in front, and in the elytra being strongly and coarsely punctate. It appears somewhat rare, the only specimens I am acquainted with being in the collections alluded to. cus serratus ¢, Parry (var. max.) (PI. V. fig. 1.) Z®. niger, nitidus, subdepressus, capite antice emarginato, bitu- berculato, subtiliter punctulato ; mandibulis capite paulo longioribus, falcatis, intus ad basin dente magno deflexo armatis, paulo pone medium tuberculis duobus armatis ; pro- thorace fere lavigato ; elytris pundtato-striatis, Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 11. Hab. Ins. Morty. Coll. Wallace et Parry. Black and shining. Head deeply emarginate in front, minutely and sparsely punctate, with a deepish fovea in front of the eye. Mandibles slender, armed at the base with a strong obtuse de- flexed tooth, followed by two small tubercles; in front of these is adeep sinus. The prothorax is somewhat broader than the head, shining, very minutely punctured, the punctures more apparent towards the sides, which are straight, the posterior angles being obliquely truncate. ‘The elytra scarcely as broad as the pro- thorax, with 6—7 longitudinal stria, faintly punctate, the inter- stices being smooth; humeral angles very prominent. Anterior tibiz armed with 5 spines, intermediate with 2, posterior un- armed. Body beneath thickly and coarsely punctate. /Ecus impressicotus 6,9, Parry. (PI. V. fig. 3.) JE. piceo-brunneus, depressus; prothorace elytrorumque late- ribus et sutura squamulis cinereis tectis; mandibulis graci- libus, faleatis, supra sulcatis, rugulosis, grosse punctatis, ad basin processu emarginato, et prope apicem dente minuto armatis ; capite transverso, confertim ruguloso, antice leviter of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 59 emarginato, lateribus pone oculos productis, punctatis ; ely- tris prothorace angustioribus, levibus, punctato-striatis ad basin, sutura lateribusque punctatis ; tibiis anticis extus irre- gulariter denticulatis, quatuor posticis unispinosis. Long. corp. lin. 7; mandibd. lin. 3. Hab. Malacca et Borneo. Coll. Mniszech et Parry. The female, which in colour and depressed form resembles the male, differs from that sex in having the interstices of the elytra thickly and strongly punctate. As is the case in the other species of this genus, the armature of the mandibles is subject to con- siderable variation; in small male specimens the subapical tooth is entirely wanting. /EcUS GLABER 6, Parry (var. minor ?). JE. angustus, rufo-piceus, nitidus ; capite antice vix emarginato, depresso, parce subtiliterque punctulato; mandibulis capite paulo longioribus, arcuatis, apicibus acutis, intus ad_ basin dente parvo armatis; prothorace transverso, lateribus cum angulis posticis rotundatis, subtilissime punctato ;_ elytris prothorace triplo fere longioribus, leviter punctato-striatis, interstitiis planis, lateribus dense punctatis, parce pilosis ; pedibus rufo-castaneis ; tibiis anticis dilatatis, extus 3 vel 4- denticulatis, quatuor posticis inermibus, Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 53. Hab. N. Guinea. Coll. Parry. One of the minor species of the genus, remarkable for its smooth and polished appearance, and allied to Agus myrmidon, Thomson, from which species it differs, however, in its more parallel and convex form, in the anterior part of the head being scarcely emarginate, in the rounded sides of the prothorax, and in the more delicate striation of its elytra, Ecus? tritopatus ¢, Parry. (Pl. VII. fig. 7.) JE. nigro-fuscus ; capite, prothorace, elytrorumque marginibus, fusco-ferrugineis, hirsutis ; mandibulis brevibus, gracilibus, intus ad basin unidentatis ; capite obscure punctato, lateribus pone oculos emarginatis ; prothorace capite latiori, rude punctato, lateribus singulariter trilobatis ; elytris ovalibus, in medio latioribus, nitidis, profunde striatis, apice subproducto; pedibus hirsutis ; tibiis anticis minute denticulatis, posticisque inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin, 6. Hab, Borneo. Coll, Parry. 60 Major Parry’s Catalogue A single ¢ specimen of this interesting new species was re- ceived from Sarawak, Borneo, and is provisionally placed with the genus Zeus, differing, however, in the short convex character of the elytra, and more especially in the singular trilobate lateral margins of the prothorax. A knowledge of the other sex of this species might possibly throw some light as to whether it might be regarded as the type of a new genus. Pratycerus Cavcasicus 2, Parry. P. ceruleus, nitidus ; capite parcius punctato, antrorsum pro- funde emarginato, impresso; mandibulis elongatis, capitis fere longitudine, curvatis, supra sulcatis, extus prope basin angulatis, intus ad basin dente obtuso parvo instructis; pro- thorace transverso, angulis anticis prominulis, deflexis, late- ribus sinuatis, angulis posticis obtusis, parcius sat fortiter punc- tato; elytris elongatis, parallelis, punctatis, leviter lineatis ; corpore subtus nigro; tibiis anticis minute denticulatis, quatuor posticis inermibus. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 63. Hab. in Caucaso. Coll, Mniszech et Parry. Readily distinguished from its European ally, P. Caraboides, by its narrower and more convex form, its prominent and more slender mandibles, its impressed and sparsely punctate head, the sinuate lateral margins of the prothorax, the obtuse posterior angles and punctuation of that segment, and, finally, by its more parallel and sparsely punctate elytra, the interstices being smooth. Pratycerus cmruLescens 6, Leconte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Science, Philadelph. 1861, p. 345. P. cerulescens &, niger ; capite thoraceque parce grosse punc- tatis, hoc transverso, lateribus antice rectis, paulo convergenti- bus, pone medium inflexis, angulis posticis obtusis, haud rotundatis; elytris nigro-cyaneis, punctis striatim digestis, interstitiis irregulariter subseriatim punctatis; mandibulis sursum incurvis, dente interno pone apicem alteroque superno armatis. Long. (mandib. incl.) unc. *48. Hab. California. In Mus. Dom. Leconte. Puiatycerus Acassi 2, Leconte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Science, Philadelph. 1861, p. 345. P. Agassi 2, elongato-ovalis, supra obscure zwneus; capite thoraceque sat dense punctatis, hoc linea dorsali levi, latitu- of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 61 dine duplo breviori, lateribus fortiter marginatis, valde rotun- datis, angulis posticis rectis, prominulis; elytris obsolete striatis, striis punctatis, interstitiis rugosis, confuse punctatis ; tibiis posticis denticulo externo ad medium armatis. Long. unc. *38. Hab. California. Dom. Agassiz. In the publication above alluded to the author states this species to be closely related to Platycerus depressus, Leconte, with which species P. Oregonensis, Westwood, is perhaps identical. Scierostomus Farrmairit 6, 2, Parry. S. depressus, supra atro-czeruleus, parum nitidus ; prothorace elytrisque vitta lutescente marginatis, parce grosseque punc- tatis; mandibulis nigris, capitis fere longitudine, ad basin pro- cessu quadrinodoso productis; capite pone oculos minute tuberculato ; prothorace disco in medio impressione magna ovali, lateribus depressis ; elytris apice acutis, sparse grosse- que punctatis, humeris productis ; pedibus nigris;_ tibiis anticis irregulariter denticulatis, 4 posticis in medio uni- spinosis ; tarsis subtus setosis; corpore infra nigro, crebre punctato. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 9. Hab. Chili. I am indebted to M. Fairmaire for the addition of this new species (of which I have also seen a specimen in the collection of Alexander Fry, Esq.) to my cabinet ; it is allied to S. femoralis, Guérin, but at once distinguished from it by its more depressed and less punctate elytra and less rounded apex of those organs, the more clearly defined and narrower longitudinal pale yellow lateral vitta above mentioned, and, finally, by the legs being black instead of rufous. The female, as is usual in this genus, differs in having short, coarsely punctate mandibles (which, in the pre- sent instance, appear to be totally unarmed), and in the minute size and strong punctuation of the head, [Screrostomus Puriierr 3, ¢ (Parry, MS.) Westw.* (PI. XI. fig. 5.) S. niger; pronoto et elytris subnitidis fasciaque pallide flavo- squamosa marginatis; capite antice concavo, utrinque inter et ante oculos carina modice elevata obliqua instructo; man- dibulis ( # ) capitis longitudine, lunatis, apice ovato-dilatatis, denteque magno plano trifido intus versus basin armatis ; * See note *, ante, p. 17, 62 Major Parry’s Catalogue prothorace lateribus parallelis, margine laterali ad basin oblique punctato; clypeo transverso, disco late impresso (et in medio punctato), antice tuberculo conico medio armato ; elytris modice convexis, punctatis, et obsolete longitudinaliter canaliculatis. 2 mari simillima, at mandibulis parvis simplicibus et protho- race parum minori distincta. Long. corp. maris cum mandibulis lin, 7, Habitat in Chili. In Mus, D. Parry. This new species differs from Scl. Lessonii, Buquet (Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. = Pycnosiphorus mandibularis, Solier, Gay Nat. Hist. Chili), in its uniform black colour, in the elytra being destitute of the numerous elevated polished spots between the punctures, the prothorax not widened in front, the head narrower, the clypeus not porrected into a rounded lobe in the middle, the crown of the head wanting the auriculated process on each side between the eyes, and in the different shape of the mandibles. The prothorax has a deep central channel, terminated in the middle of the fore margin in a small conical point. The underside of the body is glossy, with a few minute punctures, the head, including the mentum, being more strongly and closely punctured. The fore tibiz have six teeth on the outer edge, and the four posterior tibia are each armed with two spines on the outer margin.—J. O. W. ] Gen. Oonotus,* Parry. Dorcus adspersus, Boheman, Ins. Caffr. 2, 384. | * Dorcus adspersus, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. Ser. 3, 1. 435, pl. xvi. fig. 6. A description and figure of the above species (from Port Natal), by Professor Westwood, will be found in the Trans- actions of the Society (1. c.) It appears, upon examination, to be so very aberrant in general form and character from those insects belonging to Dorcus proper, that I have no hesitation in proposing it as the type of a new genus; but as we are only acquainted with the female sex, it is unadvisable for the present to give any decided characters ; nevertheless the short mandibles, the abbreviate and convex form, the squamose texture of the body, with its rounded and anteriorly trituberculate prothorax, sufficiently warrant the creation of the proposed new genus. The above characters distinguish the insect from those smaller species of the Dorcide appertaining to the genera Sclerostomus and * °Qdv, v#res, in allusion to the convex back. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 63 Lissotes. This insect appears to represent, on the southern coast of Africa, those species from S. America and N. Holland belong- ing to the genera above alluded to. Lissores Menatcas, Westw. This species appears to form the connecting link, through the genus Nigidius, between the Dorcide and Figulide. L. Honittanus, Westw., exhibits a marked difference from I. Menalcas in the character of the prothorax; but its similarity to that species in other respects, and its close affinity in appear- ance to Nigidius, have induced me to locate it for the present at the end of the genus Lissotes, immediately preceding the Figulide. Nicipius cornutus 6, 9, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. p. 109. N. cornutus, ater, nitidus ; mandibulis tridentatis ; clypeo punc- tato, antice mucronato; elytris inter strias elevatis, triplici punctorum impressorum ordine instructis, apicibus punctatis ; tibiis anticis 7-dentatis. é mandibularum margine supero et externo in ramum cor- nutum producto, @ mandibulis brevioribus, haud cornu supero instructis. A second description of this species will be found in the Ento- mological Magazine, vol. v. p. 264, by Prof. Westwood, taken from a specimen in the British Museum, stated to have been received from Mr. M‘Leay, and from Australia. Having long doubted the accuracy of this habitat, no specimens of it being contained in the numerous collections of Australian Coleoptera which have reached this country, I have only recently ascertained the true habitat of the species in question, specimens in the collections of W. W. Saunders, Esq., and of Count Mniszech, from Cambodia and Malacca, proving, upon comparison, to be identical with that in the British Museum. Nicipivs ozesus 6, Parry. N. convexus, brevis, nigerrimus, nitidus; capite utrinque infra oculos auriculato; mandibulis subrecurvis, intus ad_ basin processu bifido productis, extus pone medium dente parvo obtuso armatis; prothorace crebre grosseque punctato, in medio obsolete late longitudinaliter caniculato, angulis anticis simplicibus ; elytris brevibus, convexis, rugoso-punctatis, for- titer sulcatis, interstitiis levibus. Hab. Penang, Malacca, Long. corp. (mandib, incl.) lin. 7}. 64 Major Parry’s Catalogue This species is readily distinguished by its short, robust and convex form, and by the absence of the minute tubercle in the centre of the anterior margin of the prothorax which characterizes most of the allied species. ‘The number of external spines on the tibiae appears to be most variable in this genus; no instance, however, being known to me in which they are entirely wanting. PENICHROLUCANUS coPpRICEPHALUS, H. Deyrolle, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. Ser. iv. vol. 3, p. 485; pl. ix. fig. 11, and details. The aberrant characters exhibited in this singular insect from Malacca (vid. ]. ¢.), recently described from a unique specimen in Count Mniszech’s Collection, preclude the possibility of assign- ing, with any degree of certainty, its true position in the Luca- noidea. It is even, I believe, still a matter of doubt among many Entomolegists whether the species in question ought to be referred at all to this division of the Coleoptera. I have nevertheless placed it temporarily near Figulus, bearing, as it does, some similarity to the species of that genus, and equally, perhaps, also to the genera Nigidius and Agnus, the latter appearing to form the passage between Nigidius and Figulus. FicuLus vuLNERATuS, Thomson, Cat. p. 433. The type specimen of the above-named species from Mada- gascar has obligingly been communicated to me for examination by Mr. Thomson. It appears to me to be specifically identical with F. anthracinus, Klug (vid. Ins. v. Madagase. 85, n. 116), differing only in the confused position of the punctures forming in the normal state the dorsal striz by which the elytra are characterized. Mr. Thomson (p. 402) appears to be of the same opinion with Dr. Burmeister as to this species being synonymous with Fig. sublevis of Palissot de Beauvois, from Africa, and noticed by Professor Westwood, as a distinct species, in the Ent. Mag. v. 262, sp. 3. If the several specimens received from Senegal, Guinea and Bassan are identical with Palissot’s insect, it is very evident, upon comparison with the Madagascar species, that the two are distinct. Ficuius scaritirormis ¢, Parry (var. minor). F, scaritiformis, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 113. F. parvulus, rufo-piceus; capite grosse punctato ; prothorace levigato, lateribus vage et rude punctato, medio canaliculato, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 65 canaliculo punctato; elytris profunde striatis, striis punctatis, apice subproducto. Long. corp. (mandib. incl.) lin. 33. Hab. Malacca. Coll. Parry. The present briefly-described insect appears to be allied to F. Manillarum, Hope (angustatus, MS., Eschscholtz), and like that species varies considerably in sculpture according to development, rendering it difficult in a single description to characterize the different stages of its growth. F. scaritiformis appears, however, to differ in having the elytra somewhat shorter and more depressed, the sides of the prothorax more coarsely punctate, and the central longitudinal channel longer and deeper, its punctuation also being more defined. Since my first notice of this species, several specimens of it, in the various stages of development, have been received from the same locality. SINODENDRON AMERICANUM 64, 9, Palisot de Beauvois, Ins. Afric. et Amér. 192, tab. i. fig. 1, 2, 3; Melsheim. Cat. Coleop. Us. Se pe 57. S. piceum ; thorace marginato, glabro, antice truncato, 7-dentato, intermedio duobusque lateralibus prominulis; capitis cornu recurvo; elytris valde et subirregulariter punctato-striatis. Whether the description above quoted of an insect, stated to be from North America, can be considered as applying to a distinct species, admits perhaps of some doubt, no other specimen having been recorded from that country. Allusion is certainly made to it in Melsheimer’s Catalogue of the United States Coleoptera, but on Palisot’s authority alone. Dr. Leconte also, in his Classification of the United States — Coleoptera, mentions further that he is totally unacquainted with it. I feel, therefore, inclined to believe, from the description as well as from the great similarity of the figures given in Palisot’s work to our own European species, that Sinodendron cylindricum has been erroneously described as a distinct species under the name of §. Americanum; but not being acquainted with the type specimen, the present remarks can only be taken therefore as conjecture. Denprosirax Earrianus, White, Voy. Erebus and Terror, Zool. prix. pl. i: fig Seg, 18 S. The marked affinity shown in several respects by this species VOL, Il, THIRD SERIES, PART I,—MAY, 1864. F 66 Major Parry’s Catalogue to some of the sub-genera belonging to the Dynastide, and already alluded to by various authors, renders it somewhat perplexing to assign for it any satisfactory place among the Lucanoid Coleoptera. Mr. White (1. ¢.) remarks that this insect approximates both to Lamprima and Rhyssonotus. Professor Westwood, in his notice of the species (vid. Tr. Ent. Soc., N.S., vol. 3, p. 213), regards it as an obscure representative of Sphenognathus, with the mouth of a Sinodendron, alluding at the same time to the female as being apterous; and, finally, Monsieur Lacordaire, in his invaluable work on the Genera of Coleoptera, to which I have already had such frequent occasion to allude, although placing it with the Lamprimide, mentions that from the remarkable character of its legs the species appears to be rather allied to the Dynastide than to the Lucanide. In this view I am disposed to coincide, but have nevertheless, under the circumstances, placed it provisionally at the end of my arrangement, immediately after the genus Sino- dendron, thus establishing the connecting link between the Luca- noid Coleoptera and the Dynastide. Norr.—At one or two recent meetings of the Entomological Society, ‘“ di- morphism” or “‘ polymorphism” has been the subject of discussion. This singular phenomenon is very marked in the Lucanoid Coleoptera; and the existence of diverse forms of the same species, often exhibiting dif- ferences in their structural characters, renders necessary an acquaintance with a series of varieties of each separate species before we can arrive at a correct classification of this interesting group.—F. J. S. P., May, 1864. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 67 COLEOPTERORUM LUCANOIDUM CATALOGUS. Fam. I. CHIASOGNATHID. Genus 1. PHOLIDOTUS, M‘Leay, Hora Entom, i. 97 (1819). Casignetus 9, ib. 98. Lamprima, Schonh, Syn. Ins. I. iii. 197 (Add.). Chalcimon, Dalman, Ephemer. Entom, 1] (1824). Sp. 1. P. Humporptr, [#, 9] Schonh.].c. 2. secscccccevceecees Brasilia. Dej. Cat. 193. de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 169. Westw. Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 2, i. 119 (1834). Burm. Handb. der Entom., v. 419 (1847). Guérin, Icon. Régne Anim. 109, tab. xxvii. fig. 6. lepidosus @, M‘Leay, Hor. Entom. i. 97. Brullé, Hist. Nat. Ins. 427, tab. xxvi. fig. 3. geotrupoides 9, M‘Leay, Hor. Entom. i. 98. Cuvier, Réegne Anim. tab. xly. fig. 5. Sp. 2. P. Sprxu, [%, 9] Perty, Delect. Anim. Artic. Braz. 54, tab. xi. fic, 13 (Chalcimon)...ccssccrevccccrcesescoes Brasilia. Burm. Handb. v. 420. Lacord. Gen. Coléop. iii. 12 (1856). Dejeanii ¢, Buquet, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr, t. x. Bullet. p. 21. Genus 2, CHIASOGNATHUS, Ste. Trans. Phil. Soc. Camb. iv. tab. i., ii, (1831). Orthognathus, Dej. Cat. 193. Sphenognathus, Buquet, Rev. Zool. 1838, p. 104. Tetraophthalmus, Lesson, Illustr. de Zool., tab. xxiv. Sectio I. Sp. 1. C. Granrir,[f, Q] Ste. lc. 2.0... eceeeeee ee e-Chili et Ins. Chiloe. Westw. Ann. Sci. Nat. 1834, p. 118. », Zool. Journ. No. 19, p. 392. Sturm, Cat. Coleop. tab. iv. fig. 1,2, ¢, 9 (1843). Burm. Handb. v. 339 (1847). Gay, Hist. Chili, Zool. v. 41, Zool. Atlas, tab. xiii. fig. 1,2, #, 9 (1851). Lacord. Gen. Coleop. ili. 12 (1856). de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 170. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1850, p, 265. Chilensis, Lesson, |. c. (Tetraophthalmus), Sp. 2. C. Joussetinu, [¢] Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1850, p. 265 .... Chili. » Rev. Zool. 1850, p. 249. Schaum, Bericht der Ent. 1850, p. 48. Lacord. Gen. Coléop, iii. 13. F2 68 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 3. C. Mniszecui1, [¢, 9] Thoms. Cat. Lucan., Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1862, Pp: 406.. ee ee nc er ee eroo cove Maleleleielelonate OL Ie Parry, ante, p. 6 (Tab. X. fig. 3). @ in Coll. Germain. Sp. 4. C. Larreriyer, [ ¢, 9] Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 42 .......+++Chili. Schaum, Bericht der Ent. 1851, p. 64. Lacord. Gen. Coléop. ii. 13. Reichit g, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 407. imberbis, Philippi et Dohrn, MS. Sectio II. Sp. 5. C. Feistuameri, [ ¢, 9 ] Guér. Mag. Zool. 1840, tab. xxxix... Colombia ; Bolivia; N. Granada. Guér. Dict. pittor. d’Hist. Nat. ix. 103. Burm. Handb. v. 340 (Sphenognathus). Sp. 6. C. Prionorpes, [¢, 9] Buquet, Guér. Mag. Zool. i. ser. 2, Ins. tabs detatesleale\sisielaiels) «el selelsieis COlOMbiaseN | oranadas Guér. Rev. Zool. 1838, p. 104. Burm. Handb. v. 341 (Sphenognathus), Lacord. Gen. Coléop. iii. 14, tab. xxv. fig. 1. De}. Cat. 193 (Orthognathus). Sp. 7. C. Linpenn, [ ¢, 2 Murray, Edinb. N. Ph. Journ. N.S. v. 221, tab. ill. fig. il Oe eoere seer veres eee cree pivieitelere ei UitOs Thoms. Cat. irene! 409 (opeueeeattuay: Sp. 8. C. Murrays,[g, 9] Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 409 ....-.+++.++ Venezuela. Sp. 9. C. atzoruscus, [ 9] Blanchard, Ins. d’Amér. mérid. d’Orbigny, vi. 2, 193, tab. xii. fig. 7 (Orthognathus).......Peru. In Mus. Jardin des Plantes, Parisiis (spec. unicum). Genus 3. RHYSSONOTUS, M‘Leay, Hor. Entom. i. 98 (1819). Sp. 1. R. nesuvosus, [¢, 9] Kirby, Tr. Linn. Soc. xii. 411, tab. xxi. fig. 12 (Lucanus)..0+eeeseeeeeesees Nov. Holland. M'‘Leay, I. c. Dej. Cat. 193. Sturm, Cat. 345, tab, ili. fir. 9 ¢. de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. il. 170. Cuvier, Regne Anim. tab. xlv. fig. 8 Boisd. Faune de l’Océanie, 233. Brullé, Hist. Nat. Ins. 428, tab. xxvi. fig. 4. Burm. Handb. v. 336. Lacord. Gen. Col€op. iii. 17. foveolatus 9, Thunb. ? (sec. Burm. 1. ¢.). Sp. 2. R. (2) sucuraris, [97] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. 3rd Ser. i. 429, tab. xiv. fig. 1. ee eeee+eee Nov. Holl. ( Victoria). of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 69 Genus 4. CACOSTOMUS, Newm. Mag. Nat. Hist. 1840, p. 364. Lepidodes, Westw. Ann. Nat. Hist. vili. 124 (1841). Sp. 1. C. squamosus, [ 4, 9] Newm. I. c. e0.-seeeeeeeee esse Nov. Holland. Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii, 211, tab. xi. fig. 6, 7. Burm. Handb. v. 362. Erichs. Wiegm. Archiv. 1842, ii, 234. rotundicollis, Westw. 1. c. (Lepidodes). Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 392 (Lepidodus), Genus 5. LAMPRIMA, Latr. Gen. Crust. et Ins. ii. 152. », Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. xvii. 277. M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 99. Reiche, Rev. Zool, 1841, p. 50. Burm. Handb. v. 410. Erichs. Wiegm. Archiv. 1842, p. 108. de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 169. Lacord. Gen. Coléop. ili. 17. Sectio I. Sp. 1. L. Latreitxn, [¢, 2] M‘Leay, Hor, Ent. i. 101 ....N. Holl. (Sydney). de Castelnau, |. ¢. Erichs. 1]. ¢. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 1. Burm. Handb. v. 411. cuprea? Latr. Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. xvii. 279. eneus (var. ceruleus), Donoy. Ins. N. Holl. tab. i. (fig. inf. med.). pugmea, M‘Leay, Ics puncticollis 9, Dej. Cat. (vid. Boisd. Faune de l’Océanie, 231). enea, Boisd. Faune de |’Océanie, 228. Tasmanieé (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan, 28. amplicollis, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 411. Sp. 2. L. aurata,[g, 2] Latr. Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. xvii. 278 .. Nov. Holl. M‘Leay, Hor, Ent. i. 100. e@neus, Donoy. Ins. N. Holl. tab. i. (fig. dext. med.). Schreibers, Tr. Linn. Soc. v. 187 (secundum M‘Leay). enea, de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins, ii. 169. Guér. Icon. Régne Anim, 109, tab. xxvii. fig. 5. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 1. Schreibersii, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 1. 2 fulgida, Boisd. Faune de l’Océanie, 231 ....+--+++++-Ins, Waigiou. Sp. 3. L.sprenvens, [ ¢, 2 ] Erichs. Wiegm. Archiv. 1842, i. 108, 2. Nov. Holl. Burm. Handb. v. 413. fulgida, Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 393, An species distincta ? Sp. 4. L. rnurizans,[ ¢, 2 ] Erichs. Wiegm. Archiv, 1842, i,170,88 .. Tasmania. Burm. Handb. v. 412. Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 393. 70 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sectio II. Sp. 5. L. anza, [%, 9] Fab. Syst. El. i. 2, 2 (1792, Lethrus)..Ins. Norfolk. Schreibers, Tr. Linn. Soc. vi. 185, tab. xx. fig. 1 (1811, Lucanus). Latr. Gen. Crust. et Ins. ii. 132 (1807). », Nouv. Dict. d’Hist, Nat. xvii. 278 (1817). Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. wii, 328. Burm. Handb. v. 414. subrugosu, Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 1, 28. viridis, Erichs, Wiegm. Archiv. 1842, i. 109 (vid. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. Ser. 3, 1, 83). Sp. 6. L. Micarvr,[¢, 9] Reiche, Rev. Zool. 1841, p. 51.. N. Holl. (Swan River). Burm. Handb. v. 416. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 1. Erichs. Wiegm. Archiv. 1842, i. 108. Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 393. varians, Germ. (sec. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, i. 83). cultridens, Burm. (sec. Reiche, |. c.) - Sp. 7. L. varrans, [¢, 2] Germ. Linn. Ent. iii, 195....N. Holl. (Adelaide). Burm. Handb, v. 415. Sp. 8. L. sumprvosa, [ ¢ ] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 1, 28. N. Holl. (Swan River). Parry, ante, p. 7. Genus 6. STREPTOCERUS (Dej. Cat. 193), Fairmaire, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1850, p. 53. Sp. 1: S. speciosus, [34 9 ] Deje Cate 193" sk sis sce seiviwiee c's oo eo Chill. Fairmaire, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1850, p. 53, tab. i. fig. 2. Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 204, tab. xi. fig. 1. Lacord. Gen. Coléop. iii. 18. Dejeanii, Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 44, tab. xv. fig. ec ¢. Genus 7. COLOPHON, Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. i. ser. 2, p. 113 (1834). Sp. 1. C. Westwoopu, [ ¢] G. R. Gray, Griffiths’ Anim. Kingd. Ins. 534, tab. xlvi. fig. 5 1. ee eececesecceeseesAfric, merid. Westw. I. c. tab. vii. fig. 5. 3 . Lr Ent. Soc. N.S. in, 197, tab, x. fig. 1. Burm. Handb, v. 404. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 6. de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 173. Lacord. Gen, Coléop. iii, 21. lethroides, Westw. MS. Sp. 2. C. Tuunsercn, [ $] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 198, tab. x. Mee ap enodcond dy b600 6 Peleleile eerie ere Catania of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 71 Fam. II. LUCANID. Genus 1. MESOTOPUS, Burm. Handb. v. 362. Sp. 1. M, Taranpus g, Swed. Act. Holm, iii, 186, tab. vii. fig. 2 (1787) eseeeeeeee ees Sierra Leonum; Guinea. Linn. Syst. Nat. (ed. Gmel.) iv. 1591. Schénh, Syn. Ins. I. iii, 322. Hope, Cat, Lucan. 4. Burm. Handb. v. 363, Lacord. Gen. Coléop. iii. 23. ¢, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 107. » ante,p. 7 (Tab. V. fig. 4.) Genus 2. LUCANUS, Scop. Faun, Carn. (1763). Hexaphyllus, Mulsant, Ann, Soc. Agr. Lyon (1838). Sectio I. Sp. 1. L. cervus,[¢, 9] Linn.Syst. Nat. I. ii. 559, ed. 12(Scarabeus).. Europa. Fab. Syst. El. ii. 248, 3. Gesner, Nat. Hist. of Beasts, &c., 1005, cum fig. (vid. ante, p. 8). Schonh. Syn. Ins, I. iii, 318. Kraatz, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch. 1860, pp. 68, 265, tab. vil. Westw. Mod. Classif. Ins, i. 187. Burm. Handb. v. 350. Erichs. Naturg. Ins. Deutschl. iii. 936. Lacord. Gen. Coléop. iii. 8. Blanchard, Ann. Sci. Nat. Ser. 3, v. 322. Duval, Gen. Coléop. d’Eur. iii. 7. Bellier, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1846, Bulletin, p. 28, tab. il. fig. 3. capreolus, Fab. Syst. El. ii. 249, 5, capra, Oliv. Ent. I. i. 11, tab. i. fig. 1, tab. ii, fig. 1. Dorcas, Panz. Faun. Germ. ii. 58. hircus, Herbst, Natursyst. Coleop. iii. 299, tab. xxxiii. fig. 4 g, fig.5 9. armiger, Herbst, Natursyst. Coleop. iii. 301, tab. xxxiv. fig. 1 g. maxillaris, Motsch. Bull. Moscou, 1845, i. 60 (sec. Kraatz, I. c.) Tauricus, " a x pentaphyllus, Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1853, p. 71; Rev. Zool. 1856, p. 80. Fabiani, Mulsant, Opusce. Ent. vi. 150 (sec. Kraatz). Pontbrianti, Mulsant, Ann. Soc. Agr. Lyon, ii. 119, tab. xii. Duval, Gen, Coléop. d’Eur. iii. 12. Lusitanicus, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 9. Americanus, A ey hie Sp. 2. L. Turcicus, [¢, 9] Sturm, Cat. 346, tab. v. fig. 1 (1843).. Turcia; As. Min. ; Gracia. Duval, Gen. Coléop. d’Eur. iii. 10. H. Deyrolle, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1860, Bulletin, p. 22. Kraatz, Berl, Ent. Zeitsch, 1860, p. 273 (L. cervi var.) 72 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 8. L. onrentauis, [¢, 9 ] Kraatz, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch, 1860, p. 273.. Turcia; Asia Min. macrophyllus, Reiche (vid. Kraatz, lib. cit. p. 271) «...-- Caramania. tetraodon, Duval, Gen. Coléop. d’Eur. iii. 11....Asia Min. ; Caucaso. Tbericus? Motsch. Bull. Moscou, 1845, p. 60. curtulus? ,, sf i Sp. 4. L. raricornis, [ ¢] H. Deyrolle, MS. (vid. ante, p.9) ...+.+ Caucaso. In Coll. Mniszech et Parry. Sp. 5. L. Tetraovon, [¢, 9] Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Moscou (1806) Ae) US Bieereia eiwieis e)e o's Italia; Sicilia; Corsica. Barbarossa, Costa, Faun. Napol. pars i, tab. xvii. Burm. Hand. v. 349. serraticurnis, Duval, Gen. Coléop. d’Eur. ili, 11. Fairmaire, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1859, p. 275. Corsicus, Gautier des Cottes, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1860, Bullet. p. 03. Sp. 6. L. Barsarossa, [¢, 2] Fab. Syst.. El, ii. 251, 15.. Hispan.; Corsica; Afric. bor. Duval, Gen. Coléop. d’Eur, ii. 13, tab. 1. fig. 1 ¢, fig. 2 ©. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. ui. 325. lig. Mag. ii. 233, 1, iv. 104, 15 (see. Schonh.) Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 201, 27 (sec. Schonh.) ? Pontbrianti, yar. Mulsant, ubi sup. (vid. Gerst. Bericht der Ent. 1859—60, p. 110). Sectio IT. Sp. 7. L. runirer, [¢, 9] Hope, Royle. Illustr. Nat. Hist. Himal. tab. 1. DOTA) avon wp oles sin winels avec sic mac HOCMEINDAN Hope, Cat. Lucan. 9. Lama, Burm. Handb. v. 353. rugifrons, 9, Hope, Cat. Lucan, 4. Sp. 8. L. Mearesu, [ ¢, 2 ] Hope, Ann. Nat. Hist. xii. 364. Ind.Himal.; Silhet. Len tant-tSOCalVenios 55. Cateelucansl0: Westw. Orient. Ent. 21, tab. x. fig. 1, nigripes 9 , Hope, Cat. Lucan. 10. Sp. 9. L. Hopes, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 108.. Ind, Or. aut Archip. Malay. Parry, ante, p. 9 (Tab. VI. fig. 2). Sp. 10. L, Canrorr,[g, 9] Hope, Ann. Nat. Hist, xii, 363...,....Ind. Or. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 9. 9 * Ar. EntsSoc. ive 3. Ee of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 73 Sp. 11. L. virrosus, [ ¢ ] Hope, Gray. Zool. Miscell. 1831, p. 22 .... Nepalia. » Cate 2ucan.9. Lama, Burm. Handb. v. 353. lunifer, Thoms. Cat, Lucan. 393. Sp. 12. L. serrcans, [ ¢] Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 103 (1861) ...+++..Japonia, hircus ? Sturm, Cat. 136 (vid. ante, p. 10). Sp. sequentis var, min. ? Sp. 13, L. macutiremoratus,[ ¢, 9 ] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 9..Japonia. Sp. 14. L. vicinus, [ ¢] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 10 .........+.Ind. Or. (Poonah). Burm, Handb. v. 527. Sp. 15. L. Westermanu, [¢, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan, 10 ..........Assama. Sp. 16. L. Smirnu, [¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 108 .-see...Ind. Or. Parry, ante, p. 10 (Tab. X. fig. 2). Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 394. Sp.17. L. Fortunes, [¢, 9 ] Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 46, tab. Hipehipts We Gis, 2, lier vie wieisielsieiejeieielsle\e | ONIN. Sp. 18. L. arrarus, [ ¢] Hope, Gray. Zool. Miscell. 1831, p. 22 ....Nepalia. » Cat. Lucan. 10. Sp. 19. L. Exraruus, [¢, 9] Fab. Syst. El. ii. 249, 4 ....++e+e+Amer. bor. Oliv. Entom. I. i. 12, 4, tab. iii. fig. 7. Thunb, Mem. Soe. Nat. Moscou, i. 191. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. iii, 322. Burm. Handb, v. 354, Melsheimer, Cat. Coleop. U.S. 57. De Geer, Mem. iv. 33, 3 (L. cervi var.). placidus 9, Say, Journ. Acad. Philad. v. 202. Sp. 20. L. capreotus, [¢, 9] Linn. Mus. Lud. Ulr. 32, 30......Amer. bor. Linn, Syst. Nat. I. ii. 500, 2. Oliv. Ent. I. i, 15, 8, tab. ii. fig. 4 , tab. iii. fig. 4 9. Herbst, Col. iii. 302, tab. xxxiv. fig. 2 ¢@, fig.3 9. Panz. Ent. Beitr. i. 1, tab. i. fig. 1, 8. De Geer, Ins. iv. 336, tab. xix. fig, 11, 12. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. iii, 323. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 4, Dama @, Fab. Syst. El. ii. 249, 6. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 198, 22. De}. Cat. 193. de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 171. Melsheimer, Cat. Coleop. U. S. 57. trigonus 1 9, Thunb. lib. cit, 199, 24, tab. xii, fig. 4. muticus ? 2 ss 9 «200 Ode 74 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp.21. L. rentus, [ ¢, 9] de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 171....Amer. bor, Burm. Handb. v. 356. Melsheimer, Cat. Coleop. U.S. 57. rupicapra, De}. Cat. 193. Genus 3. RH ASTUS, Parry, ante, p. 10. Sp. 1. R. Westwoonn, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 108 (Hex- arthrius 2) .6.+..+++ee+e+.India vel Archip. Ind. Parry, ante, p. 11 (Tab. IX. fig. 2, 8). Genus 4. HEXARTHRIUS, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 4. Cladognathus, Burm. Handb. v. 364. Lucanus, Oliv, Ent, I. i. 21. Sp. 1. H. Forsrrri, [ ¢, 9 | Hope, Tr. Linn, Soc. xviii. 587, tab. xl. fig. | scvevccecccecccvicscvicesscoeece oss s ASsamas Hope, Cat. Lucan. 11. Burm. Handb. v. 367. serricollis 2, Hope, Tr, Linn. Soc. xviii. 591. Sp. 2. H. Bowrineu, [ $] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 108.. India vel Archip. Ind. »» ante, p. 12 (Tab. IX. fig. 5, 7). Sp. 3. H. Rurnoceros,[ ¢, 9] Oliv. Entom. I. i. 21, tab. v. fig. 21 ....Java. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. i, 201. Schonh. Syn. Ins, I. ii. 322. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, 1. 75. Burm. Handb. v. 366. falciger & (var. med.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. 11. longipennis 9, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 10. vitulus 9, De}. Cat. 193. Hope, Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 183. Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 394. Sp. 4. H. Buquert, [ ¢] Hope, Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 182, tab. xiii, fig. 4....Java. Rhinoceros, Burm. Handb. v. 366. Sp. 5. H. Cuavporrr, [ ¢] H. Deyrolle, MS. (vid. ante, p. 11).....Sumatra. Sp. 6. H. Mniszecuu, [ ¢] Thoms, Archiv. Entom. i. 396 .. Ind. Or. (Silhet). Lacord, Gen. Coléop. tab, xxv. fig. 5. Sp. 7. H. Panryr, [ ¢, 9] Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xix. 104, tab. x. fig. 2..Silhet. Burm. Handb. v. 367. Sp. 8. H. Devrotunr, [ ¢] Parry, ante, p. U1 (Tab. TV, fig. 1) ..+0+e+Siama, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 75 Genus 5. ODONTOLABIS, Hope, Tr. Linn. Soe, xix. 105; Cat. Lucan. 5. Sp. 1. Sp. 2. Sp. pepe: Sp. 9. Anoplocnemus, Hope, Ann, Nat. Hist. xii. 364, Calcodes, Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. i. 118. Sectio I. O. Votrennovit, [ ¢] Parry, ante, p. 13 (Tab. VIII. fig. 1) .... Borneo. Lacordairei, Parry, MS, (olim). O. Lupexrncu, [ ¢, 9 ] Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 104, tab. v. fig. 2..Sumatra. Parry, ante, p. 13 (Tab. II. fig. 1). . O. Wottastont, [ f, 2] Parry, ante, p. 14. ..+eeeeeeeee- Malacca. (Tab. II. fig. 2, 3; tab. ILI. fig. 1). . O. Movuortt [ ¢], Parry, ante, p. 14 (Tab. I. fig. 1).. Cambodia ; Siama. . O. Lacorparret, [ ¢ J Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 104, tab. v. fig. 1 (vid. ante, p- 13) cere reer rr sees suede s os SUmatra. . O. Burmeister, [ ¢] Hope, Tr. Ent. Soc. iii. 279, tab. xiii. fig. 3 (gen. Anoplocnemi typus) «+ Ind. (Mysore). » Cat. Lucan. 16. » Ann. Nat. Hist, viii. 302, Sp. sequentis var. ? 7. O. Cuvera,[¢, 9] Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xix. 105, tab. x. fig. 3.. Assama ; Silhet. Saundersii g (var. min.), Hope, Tr. Linn. Soe. xix. 105. Prinsepii g (var. med.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 16. Westw. Or, Ent. tab. xxvi. fig. 5. Delessertii , Q (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 16. bicolor g (var. min.), Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. ii. 177, tab. xvi, fig. 3. Burm. Handb. v. 360. Gazella, Westw. Or. Ent. 54, O. Deresserti, [ ¢] Guérin, Souv. Voy. Deless. Ins. 48, tab. xii. fig. 3 weeccceececeeene -. Ind. bor.; Neilgherries. Chenu, Eneyel. d° Hist. Nat. “tab. introd, fig. 2. Parry, Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 447. O. Gazetta, [ fh, 2] Fab. Syst. El. ii, 250,9; Ent. Syst. I. ii. 238; Mant. Ins.i. 1. 2.6.0 es0%eeeseeciama; China. Linn. Syst. Nat. (ed. Gmelin) iv, 1589. Herbst, Col. iii. 313, 12. Westw. Or. Ent. 54, tab. xxvi. fig. 2, 3, 4. Oliv. Ent. I. i. 13, tab. iv. fig. 13. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc, i, 195, 16. bicolor, Burm. Handb, vy. 360. 76 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sectio II. Sp. 10. O. Dux, [¢, 9], Westw. Ann. Nat. Hist. 1841, p. 154..Ins. Philippin. Westw. Or. Ent. 17, tab. viii. fig. 1. Cumingii, Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 17. Alces, Burm. Handb. v. 360. Alces?, Petiv. Gazoph. tab. xlvil. fig. 15 (1702). Sp. 11. O. carrnatus,[¢, 9] Linn. Mus. Lud. Ulr. 34 (Scarabeus).. Ind. Or. (Silhet). Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. ili, 323. ? Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Moscou, i. 193, tab. xii. fig. 2. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr, ser. 3, 1. 72. Alces, Fab. Syst. Ent. i. 1. Oliv. Entom. I. i. 8, tab. i. fig. 3a. (var. min.) Burm. Handb, v. 359. camelus (var. minor), Oliv. Entom. 1. 22, tab. v. fig. 19. Siva, Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 16. Sp. 12. O. serricosus,[$, 9] de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 171, talliapxVie) L1e:call\ etevelle:elinie lolesiololetclelcl=)eloterctl AVas ursus ©, de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 171, tab. xvi. fig, 2. Vishnu (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. 17. serrifer (var. min.), ap A Alces, Burm. Handb. v. 359. emarginatus, Dej. Cat. 193. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, i. 73. Sp. 13. O. Datmani, [$, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 17.. Tenasserim; Borneo; Sumatra; Malacca. Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 394. pubescens ¢, Blanchard, MS. Sectio III. Sp. 14. O. Srevensu, [¢, 9] Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 414 .....1++++Celebes, Parry (Tab. V. fig, 2, 5). Sp. 15. O. Deszanur,[¢, 9] Reiche, Rev. Zool. 1852, p. 21, tab. i. fig. 4eececeeceeeees oe singaporia; Borneo; Malacca. Lama ¢, De}. Cat. 193 (vid. Reiche, Ann. Soe. Ent. Fr.ser. 3, i. 72; Thoms. Cat, Lucan. 395). Styx @, Blanchard, MS. latipennis 9, Hope, Cat, Lucan. pp. 5, 17. Sp. 16. O. Casretnavnt, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p.108....Sumatra, », ante, p. 14 (Tab. I. fig. 2). of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 77 Sp. 17. O. sicoror, [¢, 9] Oliv. Entom. I. i. 22, tab. v. fig. 20.. Malacca; Borneo; Sumatra. Thunb. Mem, Soc. Nat. Moscou, i. 204, 34. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. 11. 322. Westw. Or. Ent. 53, tab. xxvi. fig. 1. Burm. Handb. vy. 360. Sp. 18. O. Brooxeanvs, [¢, 9] Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 107, tab. vi. fig. 1 (var. med.)...... +++. Borneo. Parry, ante, p. 15 (Tab. VI. fig. 5, var, max.) Sp. 19. O. Somment, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 108 ..++..- Manilla. », ante, p. 16 (Tab. VI. fig. 4). Sp. 20. O. srriatus, [¢, 9] H. Deyrolle, MS. (vid. ane, p. 15)... Malacca. Sp. 21. O. pratynotus 9, Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 18.....+4+++0+.-China. emarginatus ¢, Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 49, tab. iii. fic. 4 @, fic. 5 ¢ var. min. Evansii g, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. ii. 201, tab. x. fig. 5. Sectio IV. Sp. 22. O. Crncatensis,[ g, 9 ] Parry, ante, p. 16 (Tab. X. fig. 8).. Taprobana. Bengalensis, Tennant, Hist. Ceylon, i. 27, Cat. Coleop. Sp. 23. O. nicrira, H. Deyrolle, MS, (vid. ante, p. 17) ..+++++.++Taprobana. Sp. 24. O. rstermentus, H. Deyrolle, MS. 2.00. seeeeeceeeee es Laprobana Sp. nova, in Aan, Soc. Ent. Fr. 1864 descriptura. Sp. 25. O. zratus ¢, Hope, Tr. Zool. Soc. i. 99, tab. xiv. fig. 2 ¢ var. min. (nec @ )ee Tenasserim; Ins. Walliz Principis ; Malacca, Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 16. Westw. Ann. Sci. Nat. i, 118 (Calcodes). »,, Or. Ent. 22, tab. x. fig. 6 (var. max.) de Castelnau, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 172. Burm. Handb. v. 36]. @, Parry (Tab. VII. fig. 9). Genus 6. HETEROCHTHES, Westw., ante, p. 17. Sp. 1. H. pracnyrrervs, [ ¢, 9] Westw., ante, p. 18 ....«Cambodia; Siama. (Tab. X. fig. 6 9, fig. 7 ¢; Tab. XI. fig. 1 ¢ var. max., fig. 2 g var. min., fig. 3 9.) Genus 7. NEOLUCANUS, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 415. Odontolabis, Hope, Tr. Linn. Soe. xix. 105; Cat. Lucan, 5. Anoplocnemus, Burm, Handb. v. 357. Anodontolabis, Parry, Tr, Ent. Soc. ser, 3, i, 447. 78 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 1. N. Barapeva, [¢, 9] Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xix. 105 4.++++.Silhet. Parry (Tab. IX. fig. 1, mandibule). 1 Lama, Oliv. (vid. Parry, Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 453). angulatus (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. 17, bicolor, Burm. Handb. v. 360. Sp. 2. N. Saunpersu,[ ¢] Parry, ante, p.20 (Tab. IX. fig. 3, mandib.).. Ind. Or. Sp. 3. N. nrtipvus,[ ¢ ] Saunders, Tr. Ent, Soc. N.S. iii. 47, tab. iv. fig. 1.. China. Sp. 4. N. naticotus, [ ¢, 9 ] Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. i. 163 .... Java. Reiche, Ann. Soe. Ent. Fr. ser, 3, i. 80. Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 395. glabratus, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 18. Dej. Cat. 193. Sp. 5. N. casranoprervs,[ ¢, 2 ] Hope, Gray. Zool. Misc. 1831, p. 22.. Nepalia. » Cat. Luean. pp. 5, 18. Westw. Or. Ent, 22, tab. x. fig.5, 3 tab. xxvi. fig; -O\. bicolor, Burm. Handb. v. 360. Sp. 6. N. Sinicus, [ ¢, 2 ] Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. ili, 48, tab. iv. fig. 2,3 eeeees sisielelelele sisleieleioleiele cieveretelelereieletere ere ONIN Ar Sp. 7. N. cincuratus, [ 2] Parry, ante, p.20 (Tab. IV. fig. 3)...... Malacca. Sp. 8. N. Cuampiont, [ ¢] Parry, ante, pe 20 ..00 sees cscseecceccees China. Genus 8. CLADOGNATHUS, Burm. Handb. v. 364. Macrognathus, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 5. Metopodontus, Hy 3 4. Prosopocoilus, A 3 4, Psalidognathus, Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 13. Prismognathus, ,, Schrenck. Reise, Col. (1860), p- 1388 ; Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 10. Species Asiatice. Sectio I. Sp. 1. C. Grrarra, [ f, 9 ] Fab. Syst. El. ii. 248 (Lucanus) ..Ind. Or., Java. Oliv. Ent. I. i, 21, tab. v. fig. 16. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. i. 189, 4. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. iii. 318. Burm. Handb. v. 368. Brahminus ( @ var. min.), Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xix. 106. Giraffoides A Hope, MS. Whithillii i Hope, MS. ? Downesit 2, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 19. Sp. 2. C. Conructus ¢, Hope, Ann, Nat. Hist. ii, 62; Cat. Lucan. 18., China. ? Downesit 2 , Hope, Cat. Lucan, 19. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 79 Sp. 3. C. Forricura, [¢, 9 ] Thoms. Rev. Zool. 1856, p. 327; Archiv. Ent. i. 488, tab. xiv. fig. 7 $,8 9 ..00+-..--China. Sectio II. Sp. 4. C. rncrinatus, [¢, 9] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1857, p. 29......Japonia. Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 13 (Psalidognathus). mandibularis, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 417. Sp. 5. C. cinnamomeus, [$, 9] Guér, Ic. Réegne Anim. Ins, tab. xxvii. fig. 3 (Lucanus) .. scecsecscseres eee ce ced AVe Burm. Handb. v. 372 (Cladognathus). Chenu, Encycl. d’Hist. Nat. tab. x. fig. 3. pallidipennis, Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xviii. 590 (Lucanus). Sulvipes (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. 13. Rafflesii @, Hope, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1844, p. 106 (Lucanus). Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 274, tab. xx, fig. 2. Sp. 6. C. casraneus, [S, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan, 12 ...+.eseeceee+eeIndia Sp. 7. C. roveatus,[¢, 9] Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xviii. pars 4; Cat. Wcans U2) leveretatelclerere' ciel ole eyaveiev ere «reel ler Ona ASsalde omissus, g, 9, Hope, Tr. Linn. Soc. xvii. pars 4; Cat. Lucan. 12. fraternus g (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. 12. astucoides as », ‘Tr. Linn. Soe. xviii. pars 4. Sp. 8. C. Macretianpr, [ ¢] Hope, Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 74 ..sseeeeseee » Ann, Nat. Hist. xii. 364. », Cat. Lucan. 13. Sp. 9. C. cruipes, [ ¢] Thoms. Cat, Lucan. 416 oevcsccecsceveee ce oe india. Sp. 10. C. guaprinoposus, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 109..Ind. Or. - ante, p. 22 (Tab. VIII, fig. 4). Sp. 11. C. Jenxrnsn, [ ¢] Westw. Orient. Ent. 21, tab. x. fig. 3 ....Assama. Sp. 12. C. rravrous, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 110 ..-.-.India Or. 4» ante, p. 27 (Tab. VIII. fig. 2). Sp. 13. C. evecans, [¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 110 ......India Or. 5» ante, p. 27 (Tab. VIII. fig. 3). Sectio III. Sp. 14. C. Watraces, [¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Sec. 1862, p. 109....Ins. Gilolo. » ante, p. 23 (Tab. VII. fig. 2). Sp. 15. C. pecrprens, [ Q ] Parry, ante, p. 31 (Tab. IV. fig. 4) ....Malabaria. Specimen ¢ in Mus, Lugdun., forsitan hujus speciei. 80 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 16. C. Larerrer ¢, Reiche, Rev. Zool. 1852, p. 24, tab.i... Ins. Nov. Hebrid. ©, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 109. » ante, p. 23 (Tab. VIII. fig. 5). Lifuanus $ (var. min.), Montrousier, Ann, Soc. Ent. Fr. 1860, Ps 281 sececceveceececccecceseeesecesseceeeN, Caledonia. Sp.17. C. assrmtuis, [ 9 ] Parry, ante, p. 25.+..00--+ee00-+-.~-Ins, Waigiou, productus 9, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc, 1862, p. 109. Sp. 18. C. Tracutus g, Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 113, tab. vii. fig. 4, 5.. Ins. Ternate. Q, Parry, ante, p. 24 (Tab. VII. fig. 6 ¢). preductus ¢, Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 109. Sp. 19. C. Bison, [f#, 9] Fab. Syst. El. ii. 250 (Lucanus)..Amboyna; Celebes. Oliv. Ent. I. i, 13, tab. iii. fig. 6. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. i. 193. Schonh. Syn. Ins, I. in. 324. Burm. Handb. v. 873 (Cladognathus). tesserurius, Herbst, Col. iii. 298, tab. xxxiii. fig. 3 (Lucanus). Voet. Col. i. 55, tab. xxx. fig. 6. Sulvolimbatus, Blanch. Voy. Péle Sud, iv. 138, tab. ix. fig. 11 ideo. Sp. 20. C. crnctrus, [ g ] Montrousier, Faune de 1’Ilede Woodlark, Ann. Soc. Agric. Lyon, vii. 26.. Tus. Woodlark, N. Guinea, Ki, Aru. Sp. pracedentis var. ? (vid. ante, p. 22). Sp. 21. C. rarerauis, [%, 9 ] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 13....Ins. Philipp., Celebes. marginatus, Burm. Handb. v. 369. Sp. 22. C. Zezra, [$, 9] Oliv. Ent. 1.1, 24, tab. v. fig. 17 (Lucanus).. Birma. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. i. 206. Schonb, Syn. Ins. I. ii, 322. Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 108. Parry, ante, p. 25 (Tab. IV. fig.5 9). Sp. 23. C. sururatis, [ ¢] Oliv. Ent. I. i. 16, tab. iv. fig. 12 (Lucanus).. Siama aut Malacca. Fab. Syst. El. ii. 250; Ent. Syst. I. i. 238. Tllig. Mag. iv. 104, Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 200. Hope, Ent. Mag. v. 316.....+00+eeeeeeeeee-Japonia. Parry, ante, p. 25. Sp. 24. C. occiprracis, [ ¢, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 13.. Ins. Philipp., Celebes, Borneo. Westw. Orient. Ent. 22, tab. x. fig. 4. astericus 9 , Thoms. Cat, Lucan. 417, Sp. 25. C. sirpracratus, [¢, 9] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 200, tab. x. fig. 4 (Lucanus).. Nepalia; Thibeta; Siama. fasciatus, Reiche, MS. Sp of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 81 26. C. rvquinatus, [$, 9] Westw. Orient. Ent. tab. viii. fig. 4 .... India. Sp. pracedentis, var. ? . 27. C. arrenvatus, [ ¢] Parry, ante, p. 26 (Tab. IV. fig. 2) ....Malacea. . 28. C. sericeus, [ , 9 ] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 274, tab. xx. fig. 3 (Lucanus)......eeseeee+--Java; Borneo; Malacca, pulverosus a Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 110 (Tab. VI. fig. 1, var. max.). Juvencus 9 (Dej.), Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 396. . 29. C. rutvonoratus, [ f] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p.111.... Ind. or. » ante, p. 28 (Tab. VI. fig. 3). 30. C. pistenatus, [ g, 2] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 111 .... Ind. or. » ante, p. 28 (Tab. VIL. fig. 3 8,5 2). Sectio IV. . 31. C. rortus, [ ¢ ] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 110 .......+ Ind. or. »» ante, p. 21 (Tab. X. fig. 5). . 32. C. porsatis,[#, 2] Erichs. Act. Acad. Ces. Leop. v. 16, Suppl. tale XXMVIle 13 Ow oiel [ere cl viel ele/e ee) ele e's «/9) 010d. striatopunctatus (var. min.), Saunders, Tr, Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 51, tab, iv. fig. 5. striatus 2, Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soe. N.S. iil. 53, tab. iv. fig. 4. Sp. 4. D. Parry, [ ¢ ] Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 425 ........+++++-Ins, Celebes. . 5. D. Ternatensis, [ ¢ ] Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 423 ......+--+Ins, Ternate. Sectio II. . 6. D. victnus, [g, 9 ] Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 51, tab. iv. fig. 9 usalaial diel ola) sislistoletala(ale's)alahe/ekelalsie/elaieforelalals) ee C.010 de . 7. D. susmoraris, [ ¢] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 6, 23 ..++..ee+ee0+ eeIndia. Bengalensis (var. min.) 45 pp: 6, 22. .8. D. sinervis,[ ¢ ] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p.18..Ins. Tzousima (Corez),. .9. D. cytinpricus, [ ¢] Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 427....eesececcceee India. . 10. D. parauzecus, [f¢, 9] Burm. Handb. v. 395 ......++-.Amer. bor. Knoch, Melsheimer, Cat. 57. Say, Journ. Acad. Nat. Se. Philad. iii. 248, oetii, Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. iii, 326 (Lucanus), aper, Dej. Cat. 193. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 6. . 11. D. srevis, [ ¢] Say, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. v. 202 (vid. Melsheimer, Cat. 57) ..cecececeeceececeseAmer, bor. . 12, D. Mazama, [ ¢] Leconte, Proc, Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. 1861, PPOs Oana ste sloalca viele cise en aa/sa cd sale) oso DLCKIC(, Parry, ante, p. ol. . 13. D. PARALLELEPIPEDUS, [¢, 9] Linn. Syst. Nat. I. ii. 56] (Lucanus)..e+.. see -.--Europa, Tanger. M'‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 111. Burm. Handb. v, 393. Mulsant, Lamell. de Fr. 581, tab. i. fig. 18. Lucas, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1858, Bulletin, p- 4. Ratzeb. Forst. Ins. i. 86, tab. iil. fig. 19. Dufour, Ann. Se. Nat. ser. 2, xviii. 166, fig. 5 A. Schooh. Syn. Ins, I. iii. 325. Truquit g, var., Mulsant, Ann. Soc. Linn. Lyon, ii. 14. bituberculatus 9, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 112, 90) Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 14. D. Musimon, [ ¢, 9] Gené, Ins. Sard. i. 32, tab. i. fig. 23 9, ii, 28, tab. i. fig. 19 G@ ...+....Sardinia, Afric. bor. Burm. Handb. v. 394. Sp. 15. D. Peyronis, [¢, 9] Reiche et Saulcy, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, iv. 407, tab. xii. fig. 9........ Syria; Caramania. Sp. 16. D. Scaritrpes, [ 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 24.....+......Ind. Himalay. Forsitan D. Anta@i (ante, p. 88) foemina? Sp. 17, D. perexictus,[ 9 7} Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p.112..Ind. Himalay. » ante, p. 50. Sp. 18. D. Hypropuirorpes, [ 9 ] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 23.. N. Holl.; Ins. Melville. Sp. 19. D. carzonanius, [2] West. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, 1.515, tab. xxi. fi Pel dousie\latelsivicioie's v's alo'e'eeletelels vleiels|*)c\eiriel Na Olle Sp. 20. D. Petortpes, [¢ ] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. ili. 220 ; id. ser. 3, 1.514, tab. xxi. fig. 2..Sin. Moreton. (Nov. Holl.). Hujus speciei sit forsitan mas Lissotes Howittanus (post, p. 97)? Genus 5. MACRODORCAS,* Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 15. Psalidostomus, D > 1857, p. 29. Sp. 1. M. rectus, [¢, 9] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 16 .......+Japonia. ” ”» 1857, Pp. 29. Sp. 2. M. rucrpennts, [ ¢ ] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 16 ........Japonia. Sp. 3. M. srrratirennts, [ ¢ ] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p. 17......Japonia. Sp. 4. M. crizetzatvs, [ ¢] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1861, p.17.....-..Japonia. Genus 6. SERROGNATHUS,* Motsch. Sp.1. S. casranicotor, [ ¢] Motsch. Etudes Ent. 1661, p. 12..Ins. Tzousima. Genus 7. GNAPHALORYX, Burm. Handb. v. 396. Macrognathus, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 5. Dorcus, De}. Cat. 194. Sp. 1. G. Taurus, [¢, 9] Fab. Syst. El. ii. 250 (Lucanus) .... Archip, Ind. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 5 (Macrognathus). Bonasus, Dej. Cat. 194 (Dorcus). opacus, Burm, Handb. v. 397. “ Genera Macrodoreas et Serrognathus deseriptionibus solummodo mihi cognita, of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 91 Sp. 2. G. squaripus, [ ¢, 2] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 5, 19...++++s00.-Java. tomentosus, Burm. Handb. v. 397. Dej. Cat. 194. lutulentus, Dehaan, MS. Sp. 3. G. pitaticotts, [ f] Parry, ante, p. 51 ..++e+eeeeeeeeArchip. Ind. ? Sp. 4. G. rarvutus, [¢, 2 ] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 6, 25 (Dorcus).. Ins. Philipp. Sp. 5. G. scutptipennis, [ ¢] Parry, ante, p.52.....+4- wiefsiviels}els Nie Guineas Sp. 6. G. vecurinus, [g, 9] Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 426 (Doreus) ....Ind. or. Genus 8. ASGUS, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i, 112. Burm. Handb. y. 398. Sectio I. Sp. 1. 4. acuminatus, [¢, 9] Fab. Syst. El. ii, 251 (Lucanus).. Java, Sumatra. Schonh. Syn. Ins. 1. iii. 325. Burm. Handb. v. 399. cornutus &, Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 202, tab. xii. fig. 3. cicatricosus 9, Wied. Zool. Mag. II. i. 108 (vid. ante, p. 52). luteus 9, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 118, tab. xii. fig. 4 (vid. ante, p. 51). obscurus 9, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i, 113 (sec. Burm.) striatellus 9, Perty, Col. Ind. Or, 35 (see. Burm.) Sp. 2. A. tunatus,[ ¢, 9] Weber, Obs. Ent. i. 83 (Lucanus)..Java, Sumatra. Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 252. Schonh. Syn. Ins, I. iii, 327. Illig. Mag, i. 249 ; ib. iv. 104, 19 et 25. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. i, 203. Burm. Handb. v. 400. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 6. Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 399. falciger, Westw. Ann. Se. Nat. ser. 2, 1. 118, sub. 10. porcellus, De}. Cat. 194 (Dorcus). depressus, Ilig. Wied. Archiv. I. i. 105. punctatus Q, Fabr. Syst. El. il. 253, Sp. precedentis var. minor? (vid. ante, p. 53). Sp. 3. AS. Kanprensis, [$, 9 ] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 6 (vid. ante, p.53).. Ins. Taprob., Philipp. et Borneo. Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 399. cicatricosus 9 , Hope, Cat. Lucan, 6. Sp. 4. A. cnetrrer, [ ¢, 2 ] M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 113 (vid. ante, p.54).. Cambodia, Malacca. Boisd. Voy. Astrolabe, 235. ? Montrousier, Faun, Woodlark, p. 27 ...+e¢+Ins, Woodlark. 92 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sectio IT. Sp. 5. A. capitatus, [¢, 9] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 275, tab. xx. fig.5 (Doreus).. Malacca, Borneo, Ins. Wallia Principis. platycephalus, Westw. 1. e. (Dorecus). Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 399. Burm. Handb. v. 401. distinctus (var. med.), West. Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 276, tab. xx. fig 8 (Dorcus). Burm. Handb. v. 402. aqualis (var. min.), Westw. I. c., tab. xx. fig. 6 (Dorcus). Burm. p. 401. Malabaricus 9, Westw. l. c., tab. xx. fig. 7 (Dorcus). Burm. Lc. sinister 9, Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 6, 23 (Dorcus). Sp. 6. AZ. paratrecus, [ ¢] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 6, 22 (Dorcus).. Ind. bor. et Ins. Wallie Principis. Sp. pracedentis vel sequentis var, min. ? Sp. 7. AE. vaniiis, [ ¢] Westw. ante, p. 54 (Tab. XII. fig.5).. Ind. ( Darjeeling). Sp. 8. AE. ravicotuis, [$, 9] Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S, iii. 54, tab. iv. fig. 8 ease ere e oe eescce ae eecececvee-s China. punctiger Q, Saunders, Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iil. 55, tab. iii. fig. 6. Sp. 9. As. Escuscnoirzu, [ ¢] Hope, Cat. Lucan. pp. 6, 22.. Malacca, Ins. Walliz Principis. Sp. 10. 42, pratyopon, [ ¢, 9] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 112.. Ins. Gilolo. », ante, p. 56 (Tab. X. fig. 1). ? chelifer (var. min.), Montrousier (vid. ante, p. 54). Sp. 11. AS. stannous, [ ¢] Parry, ante, p. 57 .....Ins. Salwatty, N. Guinea. Sp. 12. As, puncripennis, [¢, 9] Parry, ante, p. 58 «2...-+0+++e.-Borneo. Sp. 13. AS. serratus, [ $] Parry, ante, p. 58 (Tab. V. fig. 1).. Ins. Morty (Oc. Pacif. bor.) Sp. 14. AS. insrerpus, [ ¢ ] Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 428.........+.+++Ins, Celebes. Vchelifer (var. min.), Montrousier (vid. ante, p. 54.) Sp. 15. AS. iwpressicottts, [¢, 9] Parry,‘ante, p. 58 (Tab. V. fig.3).. Borneo; Malacca. Sp. 16. AX. rwermts, [ $7] Fabr. Syst. El. ii 251, 17 (vid. ante, p, 49)..Sumatra. M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. 1. 113. Sp. 17. AL. interruptus, [ g 2] M‘Leay, Hor. Ent.1.113 ..........+.India? Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser, 2, i. 118. Burm. Handb. v. 401. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 93 Sp. 18. AE. pourrus, [ # ] Montrousier, Faune de Woodlark, p. 28.. Ins, Woodlark. Vchelifer, Montr. (vid. ante, p. 54). Sp. 19. AE. Mataccus,[ ¢, 9] Thoms. Rev. Zool. 1856, p. 516.. Malacea; Sumatra, rectangulus (var. max.), Voll. Tijd. v. Ent. iv. 115, tab. vii. fig. 7. Sp. 20. AS. Myrarpon, [%, 9] Thoms. Rey. Zool. 1856, p. 516 .... Malacca. Sp. 21. AS. apetruus, [¢, 9] Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 428 ......+++. ++ Borneo, Sp. 22. AL. craser, [ f] Parry, ante, p. 59 ..ceeceeceeeceeeceee Ns Guinea. Sectio IIT. Sp. 23. AE. rnitosatus, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 113 .... Borneo, », ante, p. 59 (Tab. VII. fig. 7). Genus 9. ALCIMUS, Fairmaire. Sp. 1. A. prratatus, [ 9] Fairm, Rey. Zool. 1849, p. 416, tab. xi. fig. 6.. Ins. Wallis. Genus 10. PLATYCERUS, Geof. Ins. Env. Paris, i. 59. Sp. 1. P. Canasorpes, [¢, 9] Linn. Syst. Nat. I. ii. 561 (Lucanus).. Europa. Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 253. Oliv. Ent. I. i. 20, tab. ii. fig. 2. Schonh. Syn. Ins, I. ili. 329, Curtis, Brit. Ent. vi. 274. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 194. Burm. Handb. v. 405. capra, De Geer, Mem. iv. 334, tab. xii. fig. 11. rufipes, Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 253. Latr. Gen. Cr. et Ins. ii. 134, 2, obs. spinifer, var. ?, Schaufuss (Cat. Coleop., Dresd. 1863). Sp. 2. P. Caucasicus, [ $] Parry, ante, p. 60.0 ..eeeeeeseesoeeeee Caucaso. Sp. 3. P. quercus, [4#, 9] Weber, Obs. Ent. i. 85 (Lucanus) .... Amer. bor. Burm. Handb. v. 406. Schooh. Syn. Ins. I. ii. 331. Melsh. Cat. Coleop. U. S. 57. securidens? Say, Journ. Acad. Nat. Se. Philad. ii, 249; id. Col. Exped. Rocky Mountains. piceus? Kirby, Faun. Amer. bor. 141 (Melsh. Cat.) Scaritoides ? Thunb. (Sturm, Cat. 1843, p. 136). virescens ? Fabr. App. Syst. Ent. 817. Sp. 4. P. perressus, [¢, 9] Leconte, Agass. i. Supp. p. 224 .... Amer. bor. Melsh. Cat. Coleop. U.S. 57. piceus ? Kirby, Faun. Amer, bor, 141. Helopioides, Dej. Cat. 194. 94 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 5. P. Oreconensis, [ ¢ ] Westw. Tr. Ent.Soc. iv. 277, tab, xx. fig. 9..Oregon. securidens ? Say, Journ. Acad. Philad, iii. 249. Sp. pracedentis varietas? (vid. Leconte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. 1861, p. 345). Sp. 6. P. caruvescens, [ ¢] Leconte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Philad. LB GLU PaG40) stolelelelclele clelele «lu leas leeleyers CAlliOnna. Parry, ante, p. 60. Sp. 7. P. Acassu, [9] Leconte, Proc. Acad. Nat. Se. Philad. 1861, p: AO elelstetoxeserctclotels @cevece celeleleieleisieleipiersis ciel @allfomnias Parry, ante, p. 60. Sp. 8. P. 2? epeninus, [ 4] H. Deyrolle, MS. ..00.0-.secesseeeeee Drasilia. N. Sp. cujus descriptio in Ann, Soc. Ent. Fr. 1864, Genus II. SCORTIZUS, Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, 1. 119. . S. macutatus,[ ¢, 9], Klug, N. Act. Ac. Nat. Cur. XII. ii. 432 (LUCADUS)\.. Sidciceceedee ccincs seve eece s wbrasiliae Burm. Handb. v. 422. Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii, 210, tab. xi. fig. 8 Lacord. Gen. Coleop, iil. 31. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 1. ; irroratus, Hope, Tr. Zool. Soc. i. 100, tab. xiv. fig. 3 (Pholidotus). Westw. Ann. Se. Nat. ser. 2,1. 119. Chenu, Encycl. d’Hist. Nat. tab. xv. fig. 1 @. Sp. 2. S.cucuttatus,[$, 9] Blanch. Voy. d’Orbigny, vi. 194; Ins tab. xii. fig: 10° @-(Lucanus) 20. cnc. 00. © Chili, Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, Zool. v. 46, tab. xv. fig. 4 @ (Sclerostomus). cornutus 9, Solier, MS, Genus 12. SCLEROSTOMUS, Burm. Handb. v. 423. Sclerognathus, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 7. Epipedus, Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, Zool. v. 49. Pycnosiphorus, ,, 56. Godartia, Chenu, Bueyel: d’ Hist, “Nat. tab. xv. fiz. 6. Sectio I. Sp. 1. S. Baccnus,[%, 2 ] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 26 (Dorcus) ....++..+. Chili, Darwinii, Burm. Handb. v. 424. Soler, Gay. Hist. Cluili, Zool. v. 48 (Dorcus). Chilensis, Dej. Cat. 198 (Dorcus), of Lucanoid Coleoptera, 95 Sp. 2. S. remoratis, [ ¢, 9] Guér. Rev. Zool. 1839, p. 303..Chili, Patagonia, Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 51 (Epidedus). Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 209, tab. xii. fig. 9. Darwinii g (var. max.), Hope, Ann. Nat. Hist. viii. 802; Cat. Lucan. 25. rubripes & (var. min.), Hope, Cat. Lucan. 26. Burm. Handb. v. 424. rujifemoralis g, Curtis, Voy. Capt. King, Magellan, Tr. Linn. Soc. xix 456. rufipes, Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 50, Spinole, ,, EF - na 52. leiocephalus, 3 55 . 53. modestus, Philippi, Anal. Univ. Santiago, 1859 (vid. Stett. Ent. Zeit. 1860, p. 245). . S. Farrmarruy, [o, 9] Parry, ante, p. 61 .... 2-00. sferseisiele/alafers O Ut Ts . S. Rouxerr, [ 4, 9] Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 53 .......206+- Chili. . S. c#tatus, [¢, 2], Blanch. Voy. d’Orbigny, vi. 2, tab. xii. fice Gene peeled eteneierers Co donEcondumoucOcenpeopedds \ailir Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 49, variolosus, Hope, Cat. Lucan. 25. villatus, Burm. Handb. v. 423 (Scortizus). Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 400. Cumingii, Hope (olim). circumdatus, De}. Coll. (nec Cat.) . S. rascratus, [ 9 ] Germain, Anal. Univ. Santiago, 1855, p. 397, MOLE Pubs Mile LESS)S © 55. 8oe awake oe tas ae Chat . S. tineatus, [ 9 |] H. Deyrolle, MS. (Tab. III. fig. 3). .......... Peru. N. sp. cujus descriptio in Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1864. Sectio II. . S. pLacratus, [ ¢] Burm. Handb. v. 425. ......eeeee..--ee. Brasilia, hastatus, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. 5. iii. 205, tab. xi. fig. 2 Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 400. Sp. 9. S. Lessonu, [¢, 2] Buquet, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1842, p. 283, Sp. 10. LAL SIN. Lipa llefars ele luto (e/al ete) siviciviaie « oiciele.icis) vicis »eChili. Chenu, Encycl. d’Hist. Nat. tab. xv. fig. 6 (Godartia). Solier, Gay. Hist. Chili, v. 55. mandibularis, of 7 56, tab. xv. fig. 5 (Pycno- siphorus). . Puiurers, [ 4, 3] Westw. ante, p. 61 (Tab. XI, fig. 5.)...... Chili. ay sequentis var, ? 96 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 11. S. pattrwocinctus, [¢, 2] Fairm. et Germ. Coleop. Chil. 2 CDorcus))9 cies cir stejcistslsos icles selec siee ONT, Sp. 12. S. virratus,[¢, 9] Esch. Ent. 2; Nat. Wiss. Abhandl. aus Dorpat, i. 65 (Lucanus) ......seeeeeeeees « » @hili. Blanch. Voy. d’Orbigny, vi. 194, tab. xii. fig. 9. Solier, Gay. Hist. Chil. v. 50. rubrovittalus, Blanch. |. c. (olim). Burm. Handb. v. 423 (Scortizus). Sectio III. Sp. 13. S. costatus,[ 4, 9] Burm. Handb.v. 426 ...-+ee+eeeeeee Brasilia. Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 209, tab. xi. fig. 5 9. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 27. cuniculus, Thoms. (Dej. Cat.) Cat, Lucan, 429. Sp. 14. S. Neorracus, [$,.9] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 207, fAD. TISAI. Biocvele weiss sie sive civic c¢soereicele «| OFARIIat cribratus 9, Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 429. An sp. sequentis var. ? Sp. 15. S. crvenrus, [ ¢] Burm. Handb. v. 425 oe eecc ee eeee sees ee Brasilia. Sp. 16. S. stenatipennts, [$] H. Deyrolle, MS. 0... .eee ee eeeeee es Brasilia. Species nova, cujus descriptionem dabit Dom. Deyrolle in Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1864. Sp. 17. S. Diromornes, [ ¢] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 208, tab. xi. fig, 4 wccwcsccccccccccsevevccces soos ee brasilia, Sp. 18. S. tusercuarus, [ ¢ ] Solier, Gay. Hist. Chil. v. 54 eeseeeeeseoeChili. Genus 13. OONOTUS, Parry, ante, p. 63. Sp. I. O. apspersus, [ 9 } Bohem. Ins. Caffr. ii. 384 (Dorcus)........ Natalia. Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 435, tab. xvi. fig. 4. Genus 14. LISSOTES, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 213. Gerstacker, Bericht d. Ent. 1855, p. 57. Sclerostomus, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 400. Sectio I. Sp. 1. L. reticutatus, [¢, 2] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. iv. 275, tab. xx. fig. 4 (1845) ; ib. N.S. iii. 218, tab. xii. fig. 9.. N. Zeelandia. squamidorsis, White, Voy. Ereb. and Terror, 9, tab. ii. fig. 2 (Dorcus, 1846). Blanch. Voy. Péle Sud, iv. 140 (Dorcus). cicatricosus, Burm. Ilandb. v. 403 { Acgus, 1847). Zeelandicus, Fairm, Rev. Zool. 1849, p. 414 (Dorcus). Blanch. |. ¢. tab. ix. fig. 13. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 97 Sp. 2. L. Nove-Zeexanpi#, [ ¢, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 25 (Dorcus).. N. Zeelandia. punctulatus, White, Voy. Ereb. & Terror, 9 (Dorcus). caviceps, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 212, tab. xii. fig. 6 ¢, 7 @ (Sclerostomus), Sp. 3. L. Cancrorpes, [ #, 2] Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 251 (Lucanus),...Tasmania. Oliv. Ent. I. i. 18, tab. iv. fig. 11. Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 267, cum fig.; Tr. Ent. Soc. Niesos Ilshe los Boisd. Voy. Astrolabe, 234, 3urm. Handb. v. 402 (A%gus). Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 200. Schon, Syn. Ins. I. iii. 326, Sp. 4. L. sustupercutatvus, [ ¢] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 215, ADE Rie Se 2 sieicieicalan! Saiswvee ie selce Ne HLOMee Sp. precedentis varietas ? Sp. 5. L. crenatus,[¢, 9 ] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. iii. 216, tab. xii, fig. 3 eee ee ee i ee jee Holl. Cancroides, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 400. Sp. Dp . L. ostusatus, [¢, 9] Westw. Ent, Mag. v. 267, cum fig. (Dor- cus); Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S, iii. 217 (Lissotes).. Tasmania. Burm. Handb. v. 402 (A®gus). Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent, Fr. ser. 3, i. 82. Sp. 7. L. curvicornis, [ g] Boisd. Faune de l’Océanie, 235 ....N. Hollandia. Latr. MS.; Dej. Cat. 194. Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 400. Sp. precedentis varietas ? Sectio II. Sp. 8. L. Howrttanus, [ ¢] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 513, tab. xxi. figs LC WOTCUS)) ecioe eidevisieie/eiejeicislslccle « NeEOl. Ole Hujus sit forsitan foemina Dorcus Pelorides, ante, p. 902 Sp. 9. L. Menatcas, [¢, 9] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 214, tab. xil, fig. 1 (vid. ante, p. 63) ....+++-.. Nov. Hollandia. Fam. 1V. FIGULIDE. Genus 1. NIGIDIUS, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 108. Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 121. Eudora, de Castelnau, Hist. Nat, Ins. ii. 174. Sectio I. Sp. 1. N. cranprs, [ ¢ ] Hope, Ann. Nat. Hist. viii. 302; Tr. Ent. Soc. ili. 279 ; Cat. Lucan. 26 ...... Sierra Leonum, Gabono. Georgianus, Thoms. Arch, Ent. ii. tab. i, fig. 4. Mniszechii, ‘o a5 p. 47. VOL, 1J. THIRD SERIES, PART I.—MAY, 1864, H 98 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 2. N. Busarus, [ ¢] Swed. Act. Holm. 1787, p. 187, tab. viii. fig. 4 (Lucanus) o000...0ce++--eee00e 6eGuinea, Senegalia. Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 266 (Nigidius). Burm. Handb. v. 432. integer, Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 265. auriculatus, Klug, Erm. Reis. Atl. 39, 104, tab. xv. fig. 10. verver, De}. Cat. 194 (Figulus). Midas, de Casteln. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 174, tab. xvii. fig. 5 (Eudora). Sp. 3. N. Dercorcue, [¢, 2] Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 430 ....++++e Natalia. Sp. 4. N. auricuxatus, [ ¢, 9] Guér. Icon. Rég. Anim. tab. xxvii. fig. 4 (Platycerus) ..+++.+++-++++-Senegalia, Gabono. Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 265 (Nigidius), Burm. Handb. v. 433. Thoms. Arch. Ent. ii, 48. Sp. 5. N. nitipus, [ ¢, 2] Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 431......Senegalia, Gabono. An var, tantum sp. precedentis ? Sp. 6. N. cornutus, [¢, 9] M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 109, fig. 6 (partes OTIS) Weisleoreisielelsielele slereicl cele s eievere CatbOdia, Malaccar Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 264. Burm. Handb. v. 434. Parry, ante, p. 63. Sp. ise is OBESUS, [4] Parry, ante, p- 63 alae sloisieleleisic(eleicielelolsieisleicie el VLAlaCcas Sp. 8. N. ravicotus, [ ¢, 9 ] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 264 ....++++Ins, Philipp. Hope, Cat. Lucan, 7. Fforcipatus, Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 267. (Esch, MS. ), Dej. Cat. 194 (Figulus). Burm, Handb. v. 433. Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 401. Sectio II. Sp. 9. N. Mapacascaniensis, [%, 9] de Cast. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 175 (Eudora)....seeeeeee eee ++ Madagascaria. Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 266 (Nigidius). Burm. Handb. v. 434, Bucephaius, Dup. MS.; Hope, Cat. Lucan. 7. Genus 2. AGNUS, Burm, Handb. v. 441. Sp. l. A. EGENUS, rea Burm. Handb. ve. 442 @8eecsesrveveseocee «» Mauritio. agnus, Dej. Cat. 194 (Dorcus). Reiche, Ann, Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, i. 84. le RR A lal i of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 99 Genus 3. PENICHROLUCANUS, H. Deyr. Ann. Soc, Ent, Fr. ser. 4, ili. 485. Sp. 1. P. Corriceruatus,[ ] H. Deyr. 1. c. tab. ix. fig. 11 (vid. ante, Pe 64) we csteccuecccseccsceccoe ce se Malacca. Genus 4. FIGULUS, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent, i, 110. Westw. Ann. Soc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 119; Ent. Mag. v. 261. Burm. Handb. v. 435. Sectio I. Sp. 1. F, susravis, [¢] Pal. de Beauv. Ins. Afr. et Amer. i. 3, tab. i. iiss SN ENERINTE)) Good ocen goes Sel eeleteisielsleele! TIC HOCCE Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 262 Gagulusy. Schonh, Syn. a I. iti. 331. _ 1? Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 402. monilifer, Patry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 113..++++Nov. Zeelandia? Sp. 2. F. ayturacinus, [¢, 9] Klug, Ins. Madagase. 85 ...-Madagascaria. Sturm, Cat, Coleop. 137. ebenus, Westw. Ann. Soc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 120, tab. vii. fig. 4; Ent. Mag. y. 261. vulneratus, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 433 (vid. ante, p. 64). Sp. 3. F.xiorira, [¢, 9] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 261 ......+....Senegalia. Hope, Cat. Lucan, 7. sublevis, Burm. Handb. v. 436. Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 402. ovis 1, Dej. Cat. 194. An sp. distincta, vel F. sublevis (Pal. de Beauv.) var. ? Sp. 4. F. revirennis, [¢, 9] Montrousier, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1860, Dy 2EGsccwcnecccccieces vaccess euneoe Ns Caledonia. Sectio II. Sp. 5. F. rrtiosus, [¢, 9] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 263 ....++++N. Hollandia. Burm. Handb. v. 439. cornutus, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 401 (Nigidius). Sp. 6. F. inrrcricottis, [ ¢], Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 431 ......Ins. Marianne. Sp. 7. F. necuranis, [$, 9] Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 120; Bint, Mag. v. 269) iao2 eos cess oe cere cvigy oats Holl, Hope, Cat, Lucan, 7. Burm, Handb. v. 437. Australicus, Thoms. Cat. Lucan, 432. Pacificus, De}. Cat. 194, Sp. 8. F. surcrcorzis, [¢, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan. 26 .....+ Port. Essingtonio. H2 100 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sp. 9. F. roveicottis, [ ¢, 9] Boisd. Faun. de l’Oc. 239 (Platycerus).. Ins, Maris Pacif. merid. Burm. Handb. v. 437 (Figulus). Fairm. Rev. Zool. 1849, p. 414. insularis,, Blanch. Voy. Pél. Sud, 142, tab. ix. fig, 14 (sec. Fairm. |. c.) Woodlarkianus, Montrousier, Faun. Woodlark, 26. Lifuanus, a » Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1860, p. 287. Sp. 10. F. srrratus, [¢, 2 ] Oliv. Ent, I.i. 19, tab. iv. fig. 14 (Lucanus).. Mauritio, et Ins. Borbonica. Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 253. Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 262 (Figulus). Hope, Coleopt. Man. 79. Burm. Handb. v. 438. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. ili, 831 (Platycerus). striata, de Cast. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 175, tab. xvii. fig. 6 (Eudora). Sp. 11. F. conrusus, [¢, @] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 262..Ind. or.?, Cambodia. Burm. Handb. v. 439. striatus ?, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 100. Sp. 12. F. raticoius, [¢, 9 ] Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 402 ......+.Ins. Philipp. Reiche, Ann. Soe. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, i. 84. Sp. 13. F. suscastaneus, [¢, 9] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 263 oe.see+ee.Java. Burm. Handb. v. 458. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 7. Sp. 14, F. Manrtiarum, [ g, 9] Hope, Cat. Lucan, 26 ...+..+.Ins. Philipp. angustatus ? (Esch. MS.), Dej. Cat. 194. Sp. 15. F. Scaritirormis, [ ¢ ] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1862, p. 113.. Malacca. »» ante, p. 64, Sp. 16. F. mopestus, [ ¢] Parry, Proc. Ent. Soc, 1862, p. 113..N. Zeelandia ? Sp. 17. F. Lituiruranus, [ ¢, 9 | Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. N. S. iii. 219, tab. xil. fig. 5 ec eSececeesoneesevece N. Holl. Clivinoides, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 432. : Sp. 18. F. risstcortrs, [ ¢ ] Fairm. Rev. Zool, 1849, p. 414.. Tonga Tabou, et Ins, Philipp. ? angustatus, De}. Cat. 194 (sec. Fairm. Rev. Zool. 1849, p. 414) Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 402. Sp. 19. F. Carensis, [¢ 2} Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mosc. i. 203 (Lucanus)...oersccesceeveceeevees Cap. Bon. Spei. Schonh., Syn. Ins. I. iii. 331. Burm. Handb. y. 439. — of Lucunoid Coleoptera. 101 Genus §. CARDANUS, Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 112. Sundesus, Gray, Griff. Anim. Kingd. Eudora, de Cast. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 174, Figulus, De}. Cat. 194. Sp. 1. C. sutcatus, [¢, 9] Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 113, tab. vii. fig. 3 ..sccecccccccccecevcee Java, Timor. Burm. Handb. v. 440 (Figulus). cornutus, Gray, Griff. Anim. Kingd. tab. xlvi. fig. 3 (Syndesus). cornuta, de Cast. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 175 (Eudora). cylindricus, De}. Cat. 194 (Figulus). asper, Sturm, Cat. Coleop. 137 (Figulus). Genus 6. XIPHODONTUS, Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 260. Coryptius, De}. Cat. 194. Cephax, de Castel. Hist. Nat. Ins, ii. 175. Sp. 1. X. Anrtrorpz, [¢, 9] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 260 (fig.).. Cap. Bon. Sp., Caffiaria. Burm. Handb. v. 430, Capensis, Dej. Cat. 194 (Coryptius). Sturm, Cat. Coleop. 347, tab. iv. fig. 3. Reichii, de Cast. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 175, tab. vi. fig. 7,8 (Cephax). Fam. V. SYNDESIDZ. Genus 1. SYNDESUS, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 104. Hexaphyllum, Gray, Anim. Kingd. xv. 536. Psilodon, Perty, Delect. Anim, Artic. 54, Sectio I. Sp. 1. S. cornutus, [¢, 9] M‘Leay; Hor. Ent. i. 104 ........N. Hollandia. Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 114. Latr. Cuv. Régne Anim. iv. 580, Burm. Handb. v. 333, Lacord. Gen. Col. tab. xxv. fig. 3. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, vili. 283. Boisd. Voy. Astrolabe, 238. de Castel. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 176. cornutum, Fab. Syst. El. ii. 8377 (Sinodendron), parvus, Don, Ins. N. Holl. tab. i. fig. 4 (Lucanus), Sp. 2. S. cancettatus, [ ¢, 9] Montrousier, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, vili. 283 (Ryssonotus) ..0e.0e.+..++N. Caledonia. cucullatus, Thoms, Cat. Lucan. 403, 102 Major Parry’s Catalogue Sectio IT. Sp. 3. S. Brasruiensis, [ f, 9 |] Gray, Griff. Anim. Kingd. 536, tab. xlvi. fic. 4 (Hexaphyllum Brasiliense) .......+ Brasilia. Westw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 2, i. 115, tab. vii. fice eter Ols Burm, Handb. v. 332. Reiche, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 3, viii. 283. Schuberti 9, Perty, Voy. Spix & Mart. tab. xi. fig, 12 (Psilodon). de Castel. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 176. Sp. 4. S, zqurvoctia.is, [ ¢] Buquet, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1840, p. 875 (Hexaphyllum equinoctiale)..N. Grenada, Santa Fe. Westwoodii, Hope, Proc. Ent. Soc. 1840 ; Cat. Lucan. l. Burm, Handb, v. 332. Fam, VI. ZSALIDA. Genus 1. CERATOGNATHUS, Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 260. Sp. 1. C. nicer, [$, 9] Westw. Ent. Mag. v. 261, cum fig. .. N. Hollandia. Burm. Handb. v. 325. furcatus, de Casteln, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 174 (Platycerus). cornutus, Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 403. Sp. 2. C. menrirerus, [ ¢ ] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 434, tab. xv. fig. 5 were eee OF sere re reer ee eerees N. Hollandia. Sp. 3. C. Wesrwoontr, [ ¢] Thoms. Cat. Lucan. 433..+.+..0.+.N. Hollandia. punctatissimus, Westw, Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 433, tab. xv. fig. 4. Sp. 4. C. Herororpes, [9 ] Thoms, Cat. Lucan, 434 ...-....0+ N. Zeelandia, areolatum, Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 430, tab. xiv. fig. 2 (Sinodendron 2), Genus 2. MITOPHYLLUS, Parry, Tr. Ent. Soe. iv. 55, Ptilophyllum, Guér. Rev. Zool. 1845, p. 439. Cerutognathus, Burm. Handb., v, 324. Lacord. Gen, Col. iii. 41. Sp. 1. M. rrroratus,[g, 9] Parry, Tr. Ent, Soc. iv. 56, tab. i. fig. 4.. N. Zeelandia. Hope, Cat. Lucan. 7. White, Voy. Ereb. & Terror, tab. ii. fig. 3, 4. Burm. Handb. v. 326 (Ceratognathus). Lacord. Gen. Col. ill. 41, tab. xv. fig. 4 (Ceratog- nathus), Godeyi, Guér. Rev. Zool. 1845, p. 439 (Ptilophyllum) ; Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. ser. 2, iii. Bull, 97. at sega of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 103 Sp. 2. M. Parrranus, { ¢] Westw. Tr. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 432, tab. xv. fig. 3 seeeseseseeeN. Zeelandia aut N, Caledonia ? Genus 3. CERUCHUS, M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 115. Tarandus (Megerle), Dej. Cat. (1833). Platycerus, Latr. Gen, Cr. et Ins. ii. 133. Sp. 1. C. Tenesrioues,[ ¢, 2 |] Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 252 (Lucanus) .... Europa. Panz. Faun. Germ. 62, I. 2. Duftschm. Faun. Austr. i. 67. M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 115 (Ceruchus). Heer, Faun. Helvet. i. 497. Dej. Cat. 194 (Tarandus), Burm. Handb. v. 328. Latr. Gen. Cr. et Ins. ii. 133 (Platycerus). Gyll. Ins. Suec. ii. 68. de Castel. Hist. Nat. Ins. ii. 173. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. ii. 328. Silesiacus (var. min.), Dej. Cat. 194 (Tarandus). Turandus, Panz. Beitr. &c. i. 25, tab. iii. fig. 3, 5 (Lucanus). Duval, Gen. Col. d’Eur. tab. ii. fig. 6 $,7 9. Mulsant, Lamell. de Fr. 597 (Ceruchus). Sp. 2. C. piceus, [%, 2] Weber, Obs. Ent. 84 (Lucanus)...+...+.Amer. bor. Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 252. Thunb. Mem. Soc. Nat. Mose. 1. 202. Schonh. Syn. Ins. I. iii, 327. Burm. Handb. v. 329. Americanus, Dej. Cat. 194 (Tarandus). Balbi, de Casteln, Hist. Nat. Ins. ii, 174, tab. xvii. fig. 3, 4 (Platycerus). quercicola, Sturm, Cat. Coleop. 136 (Tarandus). Sp. 3. C. srriatus, [¢] Leconte, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sc. Philad, 1859, p- 85; id. Classif, Coleop. N. Amer. 121.....-Oregone. Genus 4. ASSALUS, Fabr, Syst. El. ii. 254. Sp. 1. A. Scaraszorves, [f, 9] Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 254.... +++... Europa. Latr. Gen. Cr. et Ins. ii. 133. M‘Leay, Hor. Ent. i. 103. Duftschm. Faun. Austr. i. 70. Panz. Faun. Germ. 26, 15, 16. Guér. Icon. Régne Anim. tab. xxvii. fig, 9. Burm. Handb. v. 323. Duval, Gen. Col. d’ Eur. tab. ii. fig. 8. Schooh, Syn. Ins. [. iii 331, 104 Major Parry’s Catalogue Fam. VII. SINODENDRID. Genus 1. SINODENDRON, Hellwig, Schneid. Mag. 391. Ligniperda, Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 18. Sp. 1. S. cyzrnvricum, [¢, 9] Linn. Syst. Nat. I, ii, 544, 11 (Seara- DEUS) cecescccrccccvcscccecs cers coos ee EUTOpa. Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 376. De Geer, Mem. iv. 258, tab. x. fig. 2, 3 (Scara- beus). Oliv. Ent. I, ii, 47, 54, tab. ix. fig. a, b, ce Latr. Gen. Cr. et Ins. i, 101. Cuvier, Rég. Anim. tab. xlv. fig. 1. Ratzeb. Forst. Ins. i. 87. Heer, Faun. Helvet. 497. Westw. Mod. Classif. Ins. i, 185, fig. 13, 18. Mulsant, Lamell. de Fr. 60, tab. iii. fig. 10. Burm. Handb. v. 320. Duval, Gen, Col. d’Eur. tab. ii. fig. 9 #,10 9. Sp. 2. S. rvcosum, [ g¢] Mannerh. Bullet. Mosc. 1843, p, 262.. Oregone, California. Leconte, Ent. Rep. Exp. Missis. p. 17; id. U.S. P. R. R. Exp. Surv. Zool. par. xlvii. p. 42, tab. i. fig. 15; Classif. Col. N. Amer, 1861. Melsh. Cat. Coleop. U.S. p. 57. Doué, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1857, Bullet. p. 19. Sp. 3. S, Americanum, [¢, Q | Pal. de Beauv. Ins. Afr. et Amér. 192, tab. 1. figs 1, 2, B..eecvcevscvcecceess Amer, bor. Melsh. Cat. Coleop. U. S. 57. Leconte, Classif. Col. N. Amer. 121. Parry, ante, p. 65. An species distincta, vel S. cylindrici, Linn., varietas ? Genus 2. DENDROBLAX, White, Voy. Ereb. & Terror. Sp. 1. D. Eartianus, [¢, 2] White, Voy. Ereb. & Terror, 9, tab. ii. fire 9 AG LON! Sieleislecicielvisinejeie'elv\e oa Nip Geclandias Lacord. Gen. Coleop. iii, 15, tab. xxv. fig. 2. Westw, Tr. Ent. Soc. N.S. ii. 213. Erichs. Bericht. d. Ent. 1846, p. 49. Parry, ante, p. 69. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 105 SYNOPSIS. —_~<—- COLEOPTERA PECTINICORNIA; DIV. LUCANOIDEA. [The Species marked + are known to me by description only, and those marked * are not in my Collection. | Fam. I. CHIASOGNATHID 2%. Fam. I], LUCANID 2. Gen. i. Puottporus, M‘Leay. Sp. 1. P. Humboldti, Schonh. 2. P. Spizii, Perty. Gen. ii, Curasocnatuus, Steph. Sp. 3. C. Grantii, Steph. +4. C. Jousselinii, Reiche. 5. C. Mniszechii, Thoms. 6. C. Latreillei, Solier. 7. C. Feisthamelii, Guér. 8. C. Prionoides, Buquet. 9. C. Lindenii, Murray. 10. C. Murrayi, Thoms, *11. C. albofuscus, Blanch. Gen. iii. Ruyssonorus, M‘Leay. Sp. 12. R. nebulosus, Kirby. 13. R. jugularis, Westw. Gen. iv. Cacosromus, Newman. Sp. 14. C. squamosus, Newman. Gen. v. Lamprima, Latr. Sp. 15. L. Latreillii, M‘Leay. 16. L. aurata, Latr. t17. L. splendens, Erichs. 18. L. rutilans, Erichs. 19. L. enea, Fabr. 20. L. Micardi, Reiche. 21. L. varians, Germ. *22. L. sumptuosu, Hope. Gen. vi. Streprocerus, Fairm. Sp. 23. S. speciosus, Fairm. Gen. vii. Cotopnon, Westw. Sp. 24. C. Westwoodii, Gray. #25. C. Thunbergii, Westw. Gen. viii. Mrsotorus, Burm, Sp. 26. M. Tarandus, Swed. Gen. ix. Lucanus, Scop. Sp. 27. L. cervus, Linn. 28. L. Turcicus, Sturm. 29. L. orientalis, Kraatz. 30. L. laticornis, Deyrolle. 31. L. tetraodon, Thunb. *32. L. Barbarossa, Fabr. 33. L. lunifer, Hope. 34. L. Mearesii, Hope. 35. L. Hopei, Parry. 36. L. Cantori, Hope. 37. L. villosus, Hopes 38. L. sericans, Vollenh. +39. L. maculifemoratus, Motsch. 40. L. vicinus, Hope. 41. L. Westermanii, Hope. 42. L. Smithii, Parry. 43. L. Fortunei, Saunders, 44, L. atratus, Hope. 45. L. elaphus, Fabr. 46, L. capreolus, Linn. 47, L. lentus, Casteln. Gen. x. Ruztus, Parry. Sp. 48. R. Westwoodii, Parry. Gen, xi. Hexarrunrivs, Hope. Sp. 49. H. Forsteri, Hope. 50. H. Bowringii, Parry. 51. H. Rhinoceros, Oliv. 52. H. Buquetii, Hope. +53. H. Chaudsiri, Deyrolle. 54. H. Mniszechii, Thoms. 55. H. Parryi, Hope. *56. H, Deyrollei, Parry. 106 Major Parry’s Catalogue Fam. II. LUCANID H#—continued. Fam. II]. LUCANID A\—continued. Gen. xii. Opontotaznis, Hope. Gen. xv. CLapocNataHus—contind. Sp. 57. O. Vollenhovii, Parry. Sp. 98. C. Maclellandi, Hope. 58. O. Ludekingii, Vollenh. 99, C. cilipes, Thoms. 59. O. Wollastonii, Parry. 100, C. quadrinodosus, Parry. #60. O. Mouhotii, Parry. *101. C. Jenkinsii, Westw. *61. O. Lacordairei, Vollenh. 102. C. flavidus, Parry. *62. O. Burmeisteri, Hope. 103. C. elegans, Parry. 635.05 Cuvera, Hope. *104. C. Wallacei, Parry. 64, O. Delessertii, Guér. *105. C. decipiens, Parry. 65. O. Gazella, Fabr. 106. C, Lafertei, Reiche. 66. O. Dux, Westw. *107. C. assimilis, Parry. 67. O. carinatus, Linn. 108. C. Tragulus, Vollenh. 68. O. bellicosus, Casteln. 109. C. Bison, Fabr. 69. O. Dalmani, Hope. 110. C. cinetus, Montrousier. 70. O. Stevensii, Thoms, 111. C, lateralis, Hope. 71. O. Dejeanii, Reiche. *112. C. Zebra, Oliv. 72. O. Castelnaudi, Parry. 113. C. sutwralis, Oliv. 73. O. bicolor, Oliv. 114. C. occipitalis, Hope. 74. O. Brookeanus, Vollenh. 115. C. biplagiatus, Westw. *116. C, inquinatus, Westw. *117. C. attenuatus, Parry. 118. C. sericeus, Westw. 119. C. fulvonotatus, Parry. 120. C. bisignatus, Parry. $75. O. Sommeri, Parry. *76. O. striatus, Deyrolle. 77. O. platynotus, Hope. 78. O. Cingalensis, Parry. 79. Ownigrita, Deyrolle. +80. O. intermedius, Deyrolle. 121. C. politus, Parry. 81. O. eratus, Hope. 122. C. dorsalis, Erichs, 123. C. cavifrons, Hope. Gen. xiil. Hererocutues, Westw. 124, C. approxvimatus, Parry. Sp. 82. H. brachypterus, Westw. +125. C. Buddha, Hope. 126. C. Dauricus, Motsch. Gen. xiv. Neotucanus, Thoms. 127. C. squamilateris, Parry. Sp. 83. N. Baladeva, Hope. 128. C. perplerus, Parry. 84. N. Saundersii, Parry. 129. C. Oweni, Hope. 85. N. nitidus, Saunders. 130. C. forceps, Vollenh. 86. N, laticollis, Thunb. 131. C. Spencii, Hope. 132. C. crenicollis, Thoms, 133. C. curvipes, Hope. 134. C. rudis, Westw. *135, C. Downesii, Hope. 136. C. Savagei, Hope. 87. N. castanopterus, Hope. 88. N. Sinicus, Saunders. 89. N. cingulatus, Parry. 90. N. Championi, Parry. Gen. xv. Crapocnatuus, Burm. 137. C. eximius, Parry. Sp. 91. C. Giraffa, Fabr. 138. C. serricornis, Latr. 92. C. Confucius, Hope. 139. C. Senegalensis, Klug. 93. C. Forficula, Thoms. +140. C. Antilopus, Swed. 94. C. inclinatus, Motsch. 141. C. quadridens, Hope. 95. C. cinnamomeus, Guér, 142. C. Natalensis, Parry, 96. C. castaneus, Hope. 143. C. faber, Thoms. 97. C. foveatus, Hope, 144. C. modestus, Parry. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 107 Fam. II. LUCANIDA—continued. | Fam. III. DORCID A—continued. Gen. xvi. Homoperus, Parry. Gen. xxiii. Ditomoperus, Parry. Sp. 145. H. Mellyi, Parry. | Sp. 176. D. mirabilis, Parry. Gen. xvii. Cyctorasis, Thoms, | Gen. xxiv. Evryrracnetus, Thoms. Sp. 146. C. platycephalus, Hope. Sp. 177. E. Bucephalus, Perty. 147. C. Jekelii, Parry. 178. E. Titan, Boisd. 148. C, subnitens, Parry. 179. E, Westermani, Hope. 180. E. platymelus, Saunders, Gen. xviii, Cyctommatus, Parry. $181. E. Bubalus, Pertys Sp. #149. C. metallifer, Boisd. 182, E. Tityus, Hope. 150. C. Tarandus, Thunb. 183, E. Saiga, Oliv. 151, C. Mniszechii, Thoms. 184, E. cribriceps, Chevr. 152. C. strigiceps, Westw. 185. FE. purpurascens, Vollenh. 153. C, affinis, Parry. 186. E. concolor, Blanch, #154. C. Maitlandi, Parry. 187. E. Thomsoni, Parry. 155. C. faunicolor, Hope. 188. E. Reichii, Hope. 156. C. Dehaanii, Westw. 189. E. Niponensis, Vollenh. 157. C, insignis, Parry, Gen. xxv. Dorcus, M‘Leay. Gen, xix. CanrnaroLerurus, Thoms. Sp. 190. D..Anteus, Hope. 191. D. Dehaanii, Hope. 192. D. Hopei, Saunders, 193. D. Parryi, Thoms. 194, D. Ternatensis, Thoms, 195. D, vicinus, Saunders. 196. D. submoluris, Hope. +197. D. binervis, Motsch. 198. D. cylindricus, Thoms. 199. D. parallelus, Burm. +200. D. brevis, Say. +201. D. Mazama, Leconte. 202. D. parallelepipedus, Linn. 203. D. Musimon, Gené. *204. D. Peyronis, Reiche. 205. D, Scaritides, Hope. 206. D. derelictus, Parry. *207. D. Hydrophiloides, Hope. *208. D. carbonarius, Westw. *209. D. Pelorides, Westw. Sp. *158. C. Lurerii, Buquet. "159. C, Reichii, Hope. Gen. xx. Lrprrnorrerus, Hope. Sp. 160. L. Frvi, Parry. 161. L. femoratus, Fabr. *162. L. erythrocnemus, Burm. 163. L. tibialis, Eschscholtz. 164, L. melanarius, Hope. 165. L, Ibex, Bilberg. 166. L. V-niger, Hope. *167. L. pulchellus, MS. Mus. Berol. 168. L. polyodontus, Hope. 169. L, rotundatus, Parry. Gen. xxi. Macrocrates, Burm. Sp. 170. M. Bucephalus, Burm. Fam. III. DORCIDA. Gen. xxvi. Macroporcas, Motsch. Sp. +210. M. rectus, Motsch. t211. M. rugipennis, Motsch. +212. M. striatipennis, Motsch. +213. M. cribellatus, Motsch. Gen. xxii. Hemisoporcus, Thoms. Sp. 171. H. Nepalensis, Hope. 172. H. Macleayii, Hope. 173. H. gracilis, Saunders. 174. H. piceipennis, Westw. Gen. xxvii. SerrocNatuus, Motsch. 175. H. Passaloides, Hope. Sp. ¢214. S, castanicolor, Motsch. 108 Major Parry’s Catalogue Fam. III. DORCID A—continued. Fam. III, DORCID A®—continued. Gen. xxviii, Gnapuatoryx, Burm. Gen. xxxii, Scorrizus, Westw. Sp. 215. G. Taurus, Fabr. Sp. ea = maculatus, Klug. 216. G. squalidus, Hope. 54, S. cucullatus, Blanch. 217. G, dilaticollis, Parry. 218. G. parvulus, Hope. 219. G. sculptipennis, Parry, Sp. 255. S. Bacchus, Hope. 220. G. velutinus, Thoms. 256. S. femoralis, Guér. 257. S. Fuirmairii, Parry. 258. S. Rouleti, Solier. Gen. xxxiii. Scterostromus, Burm. Gen, xxix. Acus, M‘Leay. 259. S. celatus, Blanch. Sp. 221. A. acuminatus, Fabr. #260, S. fasciatus, Germain. 222, . lunatus, Weber. *261. S. lineatus, Deyrolle. 223. A. Kandiensis, Hope. 262. S. plagiatus, Burm. 224, A. chelifer, M‘Leay. 263. S. Lessonii, Buquet. 225. AL. capitatus, Westw. 264. S. Philippi, Westw. 226. E. parallelus, Hope. 265. S. pallidocinctus, Fairm. & 227, E. labilis, Westw. Germain. 228. . levicollis, Saunders, 266. S. vitiatus, Eschscholtz. 229, A. Eschscholizii, Hope. 267. S. cosiatus, Burm, 230. . platyodon, Parry. 268. S. Nevtragus, Westw. 231. . blandus, Parry. +269. S. cruentus, Burm. 232. A. punctipennis, Parry, *270. S. signatipennis, Deyrolle. 233. AE, serratus, Parry. *271. S. Ditomoides, Westw. 234, A. insipidus, Thoms, 272. S. tuberculatus, Solier. 235, A. impressicollis, Parry. +236. Z. inermis, Fabr. Gen. xxxiv. Odnorus, Parry. $237, 4 interruptus, M‘Leay. Sp. 273. O. adspersus, Bohem. +238. As. politus, Montrousier, 239, A. Malaccus, Thoms. Gen. xxxv. Lissorrs, Westw. 240. &, Myrmidon, Thoms. Sp. 274. L. reticulatus, Westw. 241. A. adelphus, Thoms, 275. L. Nove-Zeclandie, Hope. 242. ZA. glaber, Parry. 276. L. Cancroides, Fabr. 243. , trilobutus, Parry. +277. L. subtuberculatus, Westw. 278. L. crenatus, Westw. Gen. xxx. Axtcrmus, Fairm. 279. L. obtusatus, Westw. Sp. 244, A. dilatatus, Fairm. +280. L. curvicornis, Boisd. +281. ZL. Howittanus, Westw. 282. L. Menalcas, Westw. Gen. xxxi. Pitarycerus, Geof. Bee enalcas Westy Sp, 245 P. Caraboides, Linn, 246. P. Caucasieus, Parry. Fam. IV. FIGULIDZ. 247. P. quercus, Weber. Gen, xxxvi. Nicrprus, M‘Leay. 248. P. depressus, Leconte, Sp. 283. N. grandis, Hope. $249. P. Oregonensis, Westw. 284. N. Bubalus, Swed. | +250. P. cerulescens, Leconte. 285. N. Delgorguei, Thoms. +251. P. Agassii, Leconte. 286. N. auriculatus, Guér, *252. P. ebeninus, Deyrolle. 287. N. nitidus, Thoms. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 109 Fam. IV. FIGULID &—continued, Fam, IV. FIGULID £—continued. Gen. xxxvi. Nicip1us—continued. Gen. xli. Xrpnopontus, Westw. Sp. #288. N. cornutus, M‘Leay. Sp. 314. X. Antilope, Westw. 289. N. obesus, Parry. 290. N. levicollis, Westw. Fam. V. SYNDESIDZ. 291. N. Madagascariensis, Casteln. Gen. xlii, Synpesus, M‘Leay. Sp. 315. S. cornutus, M‘Leay. 5.8 816. S. cancellatus, Montrousier. peta ceetnaayy Duran: 317. S. Brasiliensis, Gray. Gen. xxxvii. Acnus, Burm, eat 318. S. equinoctialis, Buquet. Gen. xxxviil. PentcaRoLucANvs, Deyrolle. Fam. VI. ZSALID. Sp. 293. P. Copricephalus, Deyrolle. | Gen. xliii. CeratoGnatnus, Westw. Sp. 319. C. niger, Westw. Gen. xxxix. Ficutus, M‘Leay. 320. C. mentiferus, Westw. Sp. 1294. F. sudlevis, Palisot. 821. C. Westwoodii, Thoms. 295. F. anthracinus, Klug. $22. C. Helotoides, Thoms. 296. F. nigrita, Westw. 297. F. levipennis, Montrousier. 298. F. trilobus, Westw. Sp. 823. M. irroratus, Parry. 299. F. integricollis, Thoms. 324. M, Parrianus, Westw. 300. F. regularis, Westw. 301. F. sulcicollis, Hope. 302. F. foveicollis, Boisd. 803. F. striatus, Oliv. +304. F. confusus, Westw. Gen. xliv. Miropuyttus, Parry. Gen. xlv. Cerucuus, M‘Leay. Sp. 325. C. Tenebrioides, Fabr. 326. C. piceus, Weber. $827. C. striatus, Leconte. $305. F, laticollis, Thoms. Gen. xlvi, ZESALUS, Fabr. *306. F. subcastaneus, Westw. a G00." Aly Scarnhienides. Babe 307. F. Manillarum, Hope. y Pers 308. F. Scaritiformis, Parry. Fam. VII. SINODENDRID. 309. F. modestus, Parry. Gen. xlvii. StnopEnpron, Hellwig. 310. F. Lilliputanus, Westw. #311. F. fissicollis, Fairm. +312. F. Capensis, Thunb. Sp, 329. S. cylindricum, Linn, 330. S. rugosum, Mannerh. 331. S, Americanum, Palisot. Gen. xl. Carpanus, Westw. Gen. xlviii. Denpropiax, White. Sp. 313. C, sulcatus, Westw. Sp. *332. D, Earlianus, White. N.B. Through the kindness of J. Miers, Esq., F.R.S., &e., I have, since the preparation of this Catalogue, had an opportunity of examining the unique type- specimen of Sclerostomus Ditomoides, Westw., and believe it to be only the var. min, of S. Neotragus, Westw.—F.J.S.P., May, 1864. 110 Major Parry’s Catalogue Comparative View of the Number of Species of Lucanoid Coleoptera possessed by the Authors of the following Catalogues at the periods of publication. Species. 1845. Rev. F. W. Hope, Cat. Lucan., records..ceseceveesoeeeeeee 165 From which deduct those which have proved to be only the other sex of established species or mere varieties of de- velopment Co eecrresceserseereereeses eset esseee 37 Totaliccee (128 1862. Mr. James Thomson, Cat. Lucan., records ..eseccceecceccs 190 From which deduct as above scoecsserccccccscceccecs 9 Total..ee.. 181 1864. Major Parry, Cat. Lucan., records ..secsseseccovcesseccess 302 From which deduct the desiderata to his collection, as notified in the Synopsis by the marks * and + ...eeeee 69 Motalevcee ee 263 Count Mniszech’s collection probably contains about the same number of species as my own. The following are the names of the formerly reputed species deducted as above from the Catalogues of Mr. Hope and Mr. Thomson :— Rev. F. W. Hore. Lamprima Schreibersii. Odontolabis tenuipes 9. Tasmania. Macrognathus Downesii 9. Lucanus Hircus. Parrvi. nigripes 9. bulbosus. Americanus, Platyprosopus Chevrolaiiz. Heaarthrius falciger. punctilabris. longipennis 9. Blanchardi. serricollis . dubius. Metopodontus ungulatus, incertus, omissus. indeterminatus, aslacoides. Doreus Bengalensis. Sfraternus, curvidens. Sfulvipes. lateralis Q. Prosopocoilus speculifer. rugifrons 9. piceipennis, inermis Q. Sayersii. punctiger @. Leptinopterus funereus. subangulatus 9. sarcorhamphus, 37 Odontolabis serrifer. angulatus. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 111 Mr. James Tuomson. Lamprima amplicollis, Dorcus exaratus Q. Lucanus Pontbrianti. Sclerostomus leiocephalus. Fabiani. ; Figulus Australicus. Cladognathus speculifer. Eurytrachelus semirugosus. 9 diabolicus. oo. EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. Prate I. Fig. 1. Odontolubis Mouhotii, Parry, ¢. 2 i Castelnaudi, Parry, . Prater II, Fig. 1. Odontolabis Ludekingii, Vollenh., ¢ var. med. Za Ff Wollastonii, Parry, g. 3. ” ” 2) Prarte ITI, Fig. 1. Odontolabis Wollastonii, Parry, ¢ var. max. 2. Sclerostomus signatipennis, Deyrolle, ¢. 3. Fr; lineatus, Deyrolle, 9. 4. np fasciatus, Germain, 9. Prats IV. Fig. 1. Hexarthrius Deyrollei, Parry, ¢. . Cladognathus attenuatus, Parry, ¢. ] 2 3. Neolucanus cingulatus, Parry, 9. 4 5 ag « Cladognathus decipiens, Parry, 9. 5 a Zebra, Oliv., 2. Prare V. 1, #gus serratus, Parry, g. 2. Odontolabis Stevensii, Thoms., ¢ var. max.. 3. gus impressicollis, Parry, @. 4. Mesotopus Tarandus, Swed., 9. 5. Odontolabis Stevensii, Thoms., 2. Prarte VI. Fig. 1, Cladognathus sericeus, Hope, g var. max. 2. Lucanus Hopei, Parry, g. 3. Cladognathus fulvonotatus, Parry, ¢ var. max. 4. Odontolabis Sommeri, Parry, %. 5. 7 Brookeanus, Vollenh., ¢ var. max. 112 Major Parry’s Catalogue Prarte VII. Fig. 1. Cyclorasis subnitens, Parry, ¢. 2. Cladognaihus Wallacei, Parry, @ var. max, 3. op bisignatus, Parry, ¢ var. min. 4, Leptinopterus Fryi, Parry, @ var. max. . Cladognathus bisignatus, Parry, 9. 6. 55 Tragulus, Vollenh., ¢ var. med. 7. Agus trilobatus, Parry, 3. 8 9 on . Leptinopterus rotundatus, Parry, . . Odontolabis @ratus, Hope, 2. Prats VIII. Fig. 1. Odontolabis Vollenhovii, Parry, g var. max. 2. Cladognathus flavidus, Parry, $ var. max. 3. * elegans, Parry, S. 4. as quadrinodosus, Parry, g var. max. 5. a Lafertei, Reiche, 2. Prats IX. Fig. 1. Neolucanus Buladeva, Hope (mandib.) 1 2. Rhetus Westwoodii, Parry, ¢ var. max. 3. Neolucanus Saundersii, Parry (mandib.) 4. Cyclorasis Jekelii, Parry, @. 5. Hexarthrius Bowringii, Parry, g var. max. 6. Cantharolethrus Lurerii, Buquet, 2. 7. Hexarthrius Bowringii, Parry (anten.) 8. Rhetus Westwoodii, Parry, (anten.) Prate X. fEgus plutyodon, Parry, @ var. max. Lucanus Smithii, Parry, @. « Chiasognathus Mniszechii, Thoms., @. . Hemisodorcus Passaloides, Hope, g- . Cladognathus politus, Parry, g. . Heterochthes brachypterus, Westw., 9. ” ” ” é . « Odontolabis Cingalensis, Parry, @ var, max. . Macrocrates bucephulus, Burm., @. OenNtAanrwnse Pirate XI. Fig. 1. Heterochthes brachypterus, Westw., g var. max.; la, outline of portion of the head; 16, front of the head seen from the front; Ic, maxilla; ld, mentum; le, mentum seen from within, with the labium and palpus; 1f, antenna; 1g, prosternum seen from beneath ; 1h, ditto, seen sideways. J 2. Heterochthes brachypterus, Westw., & var. min.; 2a, outline of the side of the head ; 26, mandible. 3. Heterochthes brachypterus, Westw., 2 3 8a, the head; 3b, the eye, divided by the canthus ; 3c, antenna ; 3d, maxilla; 3e, mentum ; 3f, labium and palpus. of Lucanoid Coleoptera. 113 Pirate XI.—continued. Fig. 4. Cladognathus rudis, Westw., 9 ; 4a, the head with one of the antenne ; 4b, the eye half-divided by the canthus ; 4c, maxilla; 4d, mentum ; 4e, labium and palpi; 4/, prosternum ; 4g, the same, sileways. 5. Selerostomus Philippi, Westw., @. 6. Homoderus Mellyi, Parry, g var. max., anterior part of body, Ga, the same, seen sideways. FouatTe XII. Fig. 1. Cladognathus modestus, Parry, ¢ ; la, the left side of the head, with the clypeus ; 1b, the extremity of the right mandible; Ic, the mentum, with the four palpi in situ. 2. Cladognathus faber, Thoms., g var. max.; 2a, g var. mio., head. 3. + Buddha, Hope, g var, max. 3a. 3 ay » ¢ var. min. (C. Thibeticus, Westw.) 4. Cyclommatus Maitlandi, Parry, ¢ var. max.; 4a, side view. 5. gus lubilis, Westw., g ; 5a, the eye entirely divided by the canthus; 5b, maxilla ; 5c, the mentum, lobes of maxilla and palpi; 5d, !ebium and its palpi. 6. Ditomederus mirabilis, Parry, $ ; 6a, the clypeus and central tubercle of the front of the head; 6b, the eye half-divided by the canthus ; Gc, terminal joints of the antenna ; 6d, maxilla; 6e, mentum and palpi. VOL. If, THIRD SEREES, PART 1.—May, 1864. } zal i : F ' : : . 7 rt ~ ba 2 . mw z : ea i ‘ < * h 4 < : - “wd p ‘ ; ; : ; : ' ee y ' - oe = : n - se — 7 ‘ . ‘ i ' ~ . J / * F ‘ ’ . iz ae . ey ' a) I . - 2 < s ; : . * a i 23 = f ; : : 4 1 ; : i 1 . - . (: A 4 ‘4 i ’ II. On the Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. By G. R. WateruovuseE, F.Z.S8., Ke. [Read 7th March, 1864,] Ata former meeting of this Society, a discussion having arisen respecting the theory of the structure of the cells of wasps, &c., I stated that I possessed the commencement of a hornet’s nest— or rather of the comb—in which there were but three cells, and these only partially built: that these cells were so placed that each one came in contact with two others, and had two flat sides, the flat sides forming the common partitions between two cells; and that the remaining portion of each cell (being about two- thirds of the entire circumference) was circular at the opening. I promised to exhibit this rudimentary condition of a hornet’s nest, and was reminded of this promise by our ex-President at the last meeting. I now lay it before you (PI. XIII. figs. 1 and 1a); but before I proceed to make any remarks respecting it, I am anxious to direct the attention of the members to other nests and cells of Hymenopterous insects; and especially to the very extensive collection of these interesting objects exhibited in the small room at the east end of the northern Zoological Gallery of the British Museum. Here will be found between three and four hundred nests of various kinds of bees, wasps, &c. These nests, and many others which I have had opportunities of examining, may be divided into three principal classes. I, Nests formed in burrows in the ground, or in dead’ wood. They are very numerous, and the cells of which they are composed are either cylindrical or ovate, sometimes round, or nearly so. II. Isolated cells, not deposited in such excavations, but merely attached to some foreign substance. They are frequently ovate, sometimes cylindrical and sometimes spherical— never angular. III. Groups of cells more or less closely united, not deposited in excavations or burrows, but either attached to some foreign substance, or to a nest-covering made by the insects. Here the form of the cell is commonly hexagonal. Now it is a striking fact that of these different kinds of nests ‘VOL, Il, THIRD SERIES, PART II,—AvGusT, 1864, K 116 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the (aggregates of cells) or isolated cells, both groups of insects men- tioned—bees and wasps—furnish all the different varieties above noticed. Bees and wasps, we must bear in mind, form two very extensive and distinct sections of the order Hymenoptera, distin- guished by many important points of structure. Each of these great sections is divided into families and genera, also charac- terized by differences of structure. Here then are insects of two distinct great sections furnishing repetitions of similar architecture in the construction of their nests and cells; on the other hand, we find instances of species of the same genus building nests and cells which are very dissimilar, not only as to the structure, but as to the material used. In short, insects, very dissimilar in form and structure, build similar nests and cells, and insects of (very nearly) the same form and structure build dissimilar nests and cells. From this we may infer, either that the influence of the form and structure of the insect upon that of the nest and cell must be but of minor importance; or, that the differences in the structure of the nests and cells are more apparent than real. I entertain the latter idea, and nearly thirty years back, when called upon to write the article ‘ Bee’ for the Penny Cyclopedia, I endeavoured to show that there was a common principle in action in all insect architecture, viz., that of working in segments of circles; and that, so far as the hive-bee was concerned, the cells of that insect furnished no exception to the rule. The theory propounded by me, in explanation of the form of the cell of the hive-bee, has been objected to by several able naturalists, since it will not serve likewise to explain the hex- agonal form of the cell of the wasp or hornet, it being surmised that the same laws would govern the form of the cell in both cases. In 1835, when I wrote the article alluded to, I was not ac- quainted with certain facts relating to the building of the wasp’s nest, and when I learnt that a single female wasp constructed, in the spring time, a nest made up of hexagonal cells, I felt that the objection that had been raised against my views was a very serious one. The leading idea with me, in respect to the cells of the honey- comb, was that of a number of insects working simultaneously (or nearly so) in a confined space; but, with the wasp, the case is different, and in fact, as I soon afterwards discovered, is pre- cisely the reverse ; for it is a single insect, in unconfined space, working simultaneously (or very nearly so) at many cells: that is, so far as the nest first formed by the female wasp is Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. i concerned. The cells constructed later in the season by the neuter wasps, I have no doubt, come into the same category as the cells of the hive-bee. Having made these preliminary remarks, I will now direct your attention to one or two other specimens which I have to exhibit. But first I wish you to observe, with regard to the specimen of part of a nest already exhibited, that it consists of a stalk by which it was attached to the nest-covering, the stalk being slender in the middle and expanded at the extremities—at the base to increase the surface for attachment, and at the opposite extremity to unite with the three cells. Viewing this specimen from the side, or with the stalk towards you, there is no trace of plane surfaces; all the work is in curves, and the partially formed cells appear to be hemispherical. It is only when you view it with the openings of the cells towards you that plane surfaces are visible, and these are presented by the flat partitions between the cells. You will also perceive that were the now partially circular outline of the opening of one of these cells to be carried on and completed, it would en- croach upon the two neighbouring cells. This specimen originally formed part of an enormous hornet’s nest, the nest consisting, as usual, of a number of horizontal slabs composed of cells, and a thick covering enclosing the whole and constructed of the same materials as the cells. ‘The covering, in parts, was very irregular, no doubt arising from the situation in which the nest was placed (most probably in a hollow tree). On its inner surface were many small cavities, in several of which were small rudimentary nests, or rather portions of comb. They were evidently not completed, on account of the confined space not per- mitting of further progress. It was from one of these cavities that the specimen exhibited was taken. Here are two other small bits of comb from the small cavities spoken of. The cells are increased in number, but are less ad- vanced than in the first piece. This (Pl. XIII. fig. 2), the smallest piece of comb, shows four cells in a rudimentary condition; the most advanced of these cells (and no doubt the one first com- menced) is nearly hemispherical ; attached to this is a second cell, rather less advanced, and in the interspace of these two cells are two others, presenting a still earlier condition, The smaller of these latter has its outer free portion nearly semicircular, whilst the inner half is formed by portions of the two adjoining cells, these portions presenting curves encroaching upon the small rudi- mentary cell. The partitions between the other three cells show a slight tendency to become flattened. Comparing this piece of K 2 118 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the comb with the piece to which I first drew attention, it will be seen that the diameter of each of these rudimentary cells is less than that of the more advanced cells. The most advanced of the four cells is already half-surrounded by the adjoining cells. This piece (PI. XIII. fig. 3), from the same great nest, is still fur- ther advanced. It consists of a comparatively deep cell (a)—still, however, nearly hemispherical—and five other cells in different stages of progress, enclosing about five-sixths of its circumference. Viewing this piece (exhibiting the foundations of six cells) in connexion with the other pieces exhibited, and, again, with a piece of comb in a still more advanced state, where all the cells are of one diameter, and all (except the outermost series) are hexagonal, it seems to me impossible to avoid the conclusion that the deepest and most advanced of the six cells was the one first formed; that the cell next formed was this one, which, you will perceive, is rather more advanced than the other cells surrounding the first one, and that this little shelf (b), with a very gently con- cave inner surface, was the last work of the insect; it is the com- mencement of the sixth cell. The work here is somewhat rude and irregular, as compared with that seen in cells more advanced in condition. For instance, this (c), which from its state of advancement must have been the fifth cell commenced, unlike the other cells surrounding the first one, does not come in immediate contact with it; at least, the par- tition between cell (a) and cell (c) is double the usual thickness. I have already described how the first cells constructed form, as it were, a mere expanded portion of the previously formed stalk. This stalk is more or less irregular, and in this particular instance it is strengthened by a lateral pillar, on the summit of which the fifth cell is commenced. Again, the axes of the cells surrounding the first cell are not equidistant. The centres of the shallow little cavities, presented by the earliest condition of the cells, are more approximated than in those which are more advanced; but of necessity, if the work is continued, the centres must be gradually shifted as the work proceeds, until the whole of the cells sur- rounding the first one shall have attained their full diameter. Then, the diameters of all the cells being equal, the circumference of cell 1 must admit of six other (and only six other) cells being joined to it. I have still other points to notice in connection with this par- ticular piece of comb. Here the first formed cell (or rather part of a cell, for we see no perfect cells in any of these specimens) is purely circular in its horizontal section, whilst the second and Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. 119 third cells are separated by a flat partition. These are slight irregularities in the work, and I dwell upon them because I believe that it is only by bestowing close attention to such points that we shall arrive at any satisfactory solution of the problem furnished by the hexagonal form of the cells of these insects. Lastly, I will notice, that notwithstanding the very small amount of work that has been bestowed upon these six rudi- mentary cells, there is still a small portion of another cell visible. This little shelf (d), which springs from the angle between two marginal cells, is clearly the commencement of a cell.* * The pieces of comb just described are undoubtedly the work of the neuter insects. Mr, Smith, our best authority for all that appertains to the Hymenopterous insects, thus describes the early work of the female wasp:—‘ She begins by making three circular saucer-shaped receptacles, in each of which she deposits an egg; she then proceeds to form other similar shaped receptacles, until the eggs first deposited are hatched, and the young grubs require a share of her attention. From the circular bases she now begins to raise her hexagonal cells— not building them up at once, but from time to time raising them as the young grubs grow.” See Proc. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1858, p. 35. From certain specimens before me of the early work of the female wasp, I will make a slight addition to the above. These specimens, being forwarded for the pur- pose by Mr. Stone, were exhibited by Mr. Smith at our last meeting (in February ; see Proc. Ent. Soc. 1864, p. 2), and are now again before you for inspection. They have kindly been placed in my hands for examination since their first exhi- bition. Amongst these specimens is a single isolated cell, or rather a commence- ment of a cell—it being the first one constructed by the insect. It isin the form of a low, hollow cone, the pointed end being attached to a small stalk, and is about one-eighth of an inch in height, and of the same width at its opening. Undera magnifying glass it appears to be built entirely of glistening, whitish, silk-like threads, which I have little doubt are a secretion from the insect, all the threads being firmly attached together as if they had originally been of a glutinous nature. Of two other specimens, one shows three low, hollow cones, each cone united to two others, and at their junction having flattish partitions. The third specimen shows four such cones, with flat partitions between them. The largest of these cones scarcely exceeds the first isolated cone in size, and there are some which are de- cidedly smaller. Under a lens the work appears rather rude and irregular, the apices of the cones not springing from the same level, and the so-called flat partitions only in a rude manner sketching out the future hexagon. These cells differ from those formed by the neuters, later in the season, in being of smaller size, and in appa- rently having no admixture of foreign substances (such as masticated dead or rotten wood, which appears to be most commonly used) in their composition ; and I cannot help thinking that the extreme economy of material which is apparent in the spring nest formed by the female wasp, not only in the formation of the cells, but likewise in that of their covering, has connexion with the nature of the material used. Almost simultaneously with the commencement of the cells, it appears that the nest-covering is commenced. At first it has the appearance of a miniature umbrella, serving to shelter the rudimentary cells. As the cells pro- gress so does the thin covering, by additions to the free edge, until, when com- 120 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the I will now call attention to some pieces of comb of another species of wasp, the Vespa orientalis. These specimens may be seen in the British Museum. Here the cells, instead of being built of minute fragments of wood, glued together by a secre- tion from the insect, as in the case of the pieces of comb of the common hornet which I exhibit, are built of clay, and the work is extremely beautiful and true. Under the same glass shade are three slabs of comb of this Indian hornet (a large piece and two small slabs); one of the small slabs is fractured in parts; the other is perfect, and this I will endeavour to describe, for if taken in connexion with what has already been said of the specimens exhibited, I think I shall then have directed your attention to some very important facts connected with the matter in hand. This slab of comb is nearly round, rather more than two inches in diameter, and contains thirty-five cells in different stages of progress. Both surfaces of the slab are gently convex. All the cells form equilateral hexagons, excepting those which belong to the outer or marginal series. A few of the cells in the central part of the slab may be said to be complete, or very nearly so, having attained their full depth; and from the centre towards the margin the cells are successively less deep. Those on the margin, however, vary considerably in their depth, or, we may say, in their state of progress. Many of them have attained about half their full depth, and most of these are, at the opening of the cell, nearly true hexagons; each of them is in contact with four other cells, and each one of four of its sides thus forms a partition common to two cells. These sides meet so as to form true angles, but the two remaining sides of each cell, which as yet are not in contact with other cells, are less truly flat, and at their junction form a slightly rounded angle. Viewing these cells on the outer surface, we perceive that the imperfect angular form, which the cell has attained at its opening, rapidly disappears towards the base of the cell, which is rounded. Besides these half-formed cells, which have two free sides, there are two half- formed cells that are in contact only with three of the inner series of cells, and these two have three free sides each, which sides meet so as to form two slightly rounded angles at the outlet of plete, it assumes a spherical form, but with an opening on the lowest part for the ingress and egress of the wasp. A second, and even a third covering successively follow, and are detached from each other, The largest of the nests exhibited by Mr. Stone is scarcely equal to a hen’s egg in bulk, and the smallest is not larger than a medium-sized walnut. Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. 121 the cell, which angles disappear towards the base of the cell, as in the other, much more common, form of half-constructed cells. The other cells of the external series are Jess advanced and show no trace of angles externally, the outline of the part not in contact with other cells being, in a horizontal section, in the form of a segment of a circle. ‘These latter cells have not attained their fuil diameter. I have now to refer to some other specimens which I exhibit; and, first, to two cells, which were constructed by a bee—Osmia leucomelana. They are formed of mud; and each cell is built separately. The female bee having deposited a small pellet of mud in a sheltered spot, between some tufts of grass, imme- diately commences to excavate a small cavity in its upper sur- face, scraping the mud away from the centre towards the margin by means of her jaws. A small shallow mud-cup is thus pro- duced. It is rough and uneven on the outer surface, but beau- tifully smooth on the inner. On witnessing thus much of the work performed, I was struck with three points: Ist, the rapi- dity with which the insect worked; 2ndly, the tenacity with which she kept her original position whilst excavating; and, 3rdly, her constantly going over work which had apparently been completed ; at every fresh addition of material brought up to the margin of the cell, the bee worked back again in the cavity which was already rendered smooth. ‘To continue the cell, more material has to be sought for. It is added to the margin of the little cup first scooped out, and is wrought, by scraping, on the inner side; and here, again, it is certain that the bee does not entirely confine the work of her jaws to the additional material, but again passes them over the old work, and hence the part of the work already completed has a certain influence upon that which follows. The curves first formed have an in- fluence upon those that follow, and, if continued, they would return again into themselves; that is to say, the cell would be- come a hollow sphere, but the tendency to this form is partially overcome by the fact that the cell has to be constructed by exca- vation, and by an insect which, when at work, is on the outside of it. The effect is, that it gradually passes from the spherical towards the cylindrical form, but never quite attains the latter, for the sides gradually close in, and ultimately the aperture becomes too contracted for the bee to insert her head and to carry on the work as before. Still fresh mud is added to the margin of the cell, but only to the inner edge, and this is continued horizontally, 122 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the ring after ring of mud, till the cell is closed in by a lid; the lid is excavated and rendered concave on its outer or upper surface, and is convex and rough on its inner surface, and, in fact, is a simple repetition of the first-formed portion of the cell, a part of a hollow sphere; and if the work proceeded beyond this point, there can be little doubt that this lid of a cell would become the bottom of another similar cell, and thus we should have the cells joined end to end, and with a common straight axis, as we see in the cells of certain other bees—Megachile for instance; here, however, the cells are deposited in cylindrical burrows made in the ground, and the cells themselves are cylin- drical. I have witnessed the construction of the first part of the cell of the Osmia, and I have seen cells in all states of progress from that part to their completion. The completed Osmia cell strongly reminded me of the isolated cells built by the hive-bee for the queen-bee larva; the general form is the same to this extent,—they are both hemispherical at the base, and gradually approach the cylindrical form towards the mouth of the cell. I have still one other form of cell, to which I wish to direct your attention. These two cells, like those of the Osmia, are constructed of mud, but the insect that formed them (a species of Eumenes) belongs to the wasp tribe. Whilst the Osmia is a short stout insect with short legs, the Humenes is slender and has long legs. The cell of the Osmia would be completely filled by the pupa of the insect reared in it; but that of the Eumenes is much larger when compared with the size of the insect that constructed it. This difference in the proportionate size of the cells has, no doubt, reference to the kind of food which has to be stored up for feeding the larva. Furthermore, these cells differ from those of the Osmia in being almost perfectly spherical. They remind one of certain water bottles, and, like them, have a short neck, through which is the opening into the nest. The opening is very small, but I have little doubt would permit the insect to enter the cell; but, on the other hand, I much doubt whether she could perform the whole of the work of its construction from the outer side. I believe, indeed, that in executing the latter part of the work, at least, the insect was inside the cell. However this may be, here is a cell, the foundation of which was laid down in seg- ments of circles of much larger size than those seen in the cell of the Osmia, and, in connexion with this, we have the fact, that the comparatively long legs of the Humenes would give it the power of a far greater stretch, supposing that her work was com- Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. 123 menced and carried on like that of the Osmia. In this case you observe there are two cells joined side by side; but as in other similar cells constructed by species of Humenes which have come under my notice the cells are isolated,* there can be little doubt these two cells were constructed separately. I compared the cell of the Osmia to that of the queen-bee of the hive, and I regret that I am unable to exhibit a perfect spe- cimen of a queen’s cell. On this piece of honeycomb, however, you will see two half-formed queen’s cells, and I am anxious that you should notice the peculiarities in the work of the hive-bee in the region of these cells. In order to form a foundation for one of these large cells, it being attached to a very irregular surface, an abundance of wax is used. The foundation being formed, however, this superfluous wax is not allowed to remain, but the bees immediately commence its removal, and it is evident that many must be engaged in this work. The queen’s cell is bur- rowed into in all parts. Where the wax is thinner, the surface of the cell is covered with little shallow, circular pits; where thicker, the pits are deeper and of larger diameter ; and what is worthy of remark is, that these pits are very rarely confluent, they are separated by walls of the same height. Lastly, at the base of the cell where the wax is thickest, the pits have, some of them, assumed the hexagonal form of the ordinary cells, but they are of but little depth and apparently useless. Between these and the small pits first noticed, there are other pits showing every inter- mediate condition,—some partly rounded and partly angular, and in those that are angular, the number of straight sides is very variable. Here are two little pits having a common flat partition between them, but which are elsewhere circular. The bottoms of the pits, moreover, are either circular or angular ; but, in all cases, it will be seen, upon examining them attentively, that wherever the pits are bounded by flat sides, the flat sides form the common partitions between themselves and adjoining cavities. This irre- gularity is not confined to the region of the queen’s cells, but occurs frequently in other parts of the comb. In the pieces of comb on the table there are cells with five and with seven} sides : there are cells, which, instead of having three plates at the bottom, * One of these isolated cells is figured by Mr. Smith in his ‘‘ Catalogue of Hymenopterous Insects in the Collection of the British Museum.” See Part V. Vespide, plate 6, fig. 7. + Two specimens of 7-sided cells exhibited are cells of rather larger diameter than usual, and have surrounding them six cells varying slightly in size, and a small abortive seventh cell, ‘he sides of the 7-sided cell are therefore unequal, 124. Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the have but one plate; each of such cells being exactly opposed to one other cell on the opposite side of the comb.* and it is only at the mouth of the cell that the seven sides appear. 5-sided cells are common, this being the usual form of the cells of the first-formed tier in the hive, cells which are on one side in contact with the roof of the hive, and are surrounded at other parts by four cells. * In the British Museum is a nest of one of the slender-bodied wasps which is well worth examination in connexion with any theory intended to explain the form of the cells. The nest in question has its upper part dome-shaped, and is built round a stout stick. The under part is closed in by a thin covering, the outer surface of which is gently convex (excepting at one part, where a small area is depressed and slightly concave). It furnishes an extensive surface, being between seven and eight inches in diameter. A small opening is left in this lower envelope of the nest for the ingress and egress of the wasps. Nearly the whole of its surface is covered by a network of rudimentary cells, the average depth of the cells being about the eighth of an inch ; those on the concave part, however, are much deeper. The cells covering the chief part of this area are truly hexagonal, and the bottoms of the cells are flat or very nearly so. Notwith- standing the beautiful regularity which prevails in this work, there are, in certain parts, some remarkable aberrations from the normal conditions. The most ir- regularly formed cells are those on the margins of the nest-covering. Here the lower edges of the dome-shaped upper and outer covering of the nest descend and hang down like a curtain, with an average width of about half an inch, which serves to protect the comb being constructed on the under covering of the nest, and which in time, had the structure proceeded, would itself have been inclosed. The cells which come in contact with this curtain are so built that the curtain forms their outer boundary, and most of them are pentagonal, but with very unequal sides, the partitions which separate them from each other being often twice, and sometimes three times as long as those which separate the marginal from the sub-marginal cells. These cells, moreover, are frequently confluent, some of the partitions which should have separated them not being carried up, but sketched out, as it were, by an indistinct ridge; in short, so variable are these marginal cells, that one may safely say there are no two alike. In other parts are some singular modifications in the forms of the cells. I will notice one particular cell and a few others that are near toit. This cell has six sides ; two longer sides which meet as nearly as possible at a right angle, and one very short side. From this short side extend two sides of an adjoining cell, and these form part of the boundary of a cell with five unequal sides, two of which sides do not meet so as to form a true angle, for the angle is rounded (I so express it for brevity sake). From this rounded angle runs out one of those rudi- mentary partitions which merely sketch out the boundaries of what I have termed confluent cells. Again, joining the cell first noticed, and also adjoining each other, are two cells which are very nearly square, each having four long sides. and one extremely short one; these again join a cell which has seven unequal sides. I will only further add, with respect to this nest that there is a con- siderable area round the thick stick which passes through the nest on which cells have not been commenced, and that nearly the whole of the cells which abut upon this area (and they are numerous) have their free margin rounded; in one or two only is the outer margin rendered angular. Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. 125 Now the chief difference between the hive-bee’s cell and that of the wasp is, that, in the former, the bottoms or bases of the cells are made up of plane surfaces ; whilst, in the case of the wasp, the cells are hemispherical (or nearly so) at the base; never showing either angles or plane surfaces. And the difference in the slabs of comb made by the two insects is this: a slab of wasp comb consists only of one layer of cells; all the cells opening out in one direction; whilst the slab of honeycomb presents cells on both surfaces, those on one surface being united to those of the opposite side by their bases, and, consequently, the openings of the cells of the two sides of the slab are in opposite directions. When it is stated (as is often done) that, in this case, each cell is exactly opposed to three other cells, only the more common con- dition of the honeycomb is described, for there is considerable variation in this respect, as I have already shown; and the number of the plates of which the base of the cell is composed, as well as their form and proportions, is varied accordingly. This difference in the form of the bases of the wasp cells and that of the hive bee, connected, as it is, by contact of opposing cells, on the one hand, and non-contact on the other, furnishes a very striking fact in connexion with the subject under consideration. But the cells of the honey-bee are not always angular at the base nor at the sides, as appears from certain experiments made by Mr. Tegetmeier. ‘“ My first experiment” (says this gentleman) “consisted in placing a flat parallel-sided block of wax in a hive containing a recent swarm. In this the cells were excavated by the bees at irregular distances. In every case where the excavation was isolate it was hemispherical, and the wax excavated was addéd at the margin, so as to constitute a cylindrical cell. As other exca- vations were made in contact mith those previously formed, the cells became flat-sided, but, from the irregularity of their arrangement, not necessarily hexagonal.” * The hexagonal cells I have been speaking of have for the most part been built under conditions which would not permit of the full diameter of the cell being carried out; but in the wasp comb, like that of the hive-bee, there are cells of larger size, which often appear quite suddenly, and extend over a considerable extent of surface: in the hive-bee they are known as the drone’s cells. Upon measuring these carefully, Ifind that their average diameter is equal to that of the ordinary cells, if measured across the centre from * See Report of the 28th Meeting of the British Association. ‘‘ Transactions of the Sections,” p. 132. 126 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the angle to angle, and I assume, therefore, that they are cells having the full diameter permitted by the stretch of the insect, as it ordinarily works in cell-building ; such cells would merely touch each other were they cylindrical (whereas, in the smaller cells, the natural outlines would intersect), and there would be in their interstices a certain amount of superfluous material, which the instinctive propensities of the insects would lead them to remove ; for, as I have before pointed out, their cells are carried up from the original foundation by adding material to their margins, and this is followed by excavation on the inner side. I have now to speak of those cells on the margin of the wasp comb which are more or less angular on the outer side, and yet, at that part, are not in contact with other cells. It has been stated that after the marginal cells have been carried up to a small extent the next work of the wasp is to commence other cells in the angles between each pair of these cells; thus converting the cells which were marginal into inner cells, and that then the sub-marginal cells become truly angular and hexagonal. Let 1, 2 and 3 (PI. XIII. fig. 4) be three partially constructed marginal cells; and let a and b be two cells commenced in the angles between them; it is clear that the work performed on the cells 1, 2 and 8 can no longer belong entirely to those cells,—they being continued by the insect almost simultaneously with the cells a and b. So much work as is bestowed upon cell 2 on its outer side must equally form part of the walls of cells a and b; and the work of cells a, 6 must in part belong to cells 1, 2 and 3. As these cells (a and b) moreover increase in size, part of the work in each must be common to the two, viz., at the point d, where they will become united. The force, then (I will so put it), that is thrown, for instance, on that part of cell a that comes in contact with cell 2, is met by another force in cell 2 at that part in which it is in contact with cell a; and the two forces are equal. If the cells 2, a and Db are to be carried up together, there is no reason why any one should encroach on any other, but the contrary. When the insect is at work with its head in cell }, there must be a certain time during which its work is bestowed on the part which is common to cell b and cell 2, and at another time it will be at work upon the part which is common to cell 6 and cell 3. Tt works, then, to the left and to the right equally, and we must suppose that the axis of its body is in the direction of the partition which separates cells 2 and 3; and, taking the size of the wasp and of its cell into consideration, we may add that its abdomen would be extended across another cell (4) behind these. Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. 127 If cell a had been previously commenced, we can see that the work afterwards performed in cell b might be restricted on the side next that cell; but on the opposite side, which is not so re- stricted, the work is not laterally extended beyond the same point; and I infer from this, that when the insect is in the position men- tioned (and there is no disturbing cause*), its power of stretch controls the diameter of the cell, as appeared to be the case with the Osmia. That from a certain point, which shall be, we will say, the centre of cell 6, the stretch being in all directions equal from the centre, must describe a circle, and at the same time it must be equal, in each direction from the centre, to one side of a hexagon, the angles of which would touch that circle. Cell-building consists of a constant repetition of similar work, and of similar parts of the work. Let us see what would be the effect of such repetition upon the cell 3. Cells 1, 2 and 3 are partly built and are marginal cells; cells 4.and 5 are within these, and are more advanced. The next operation, according to the usual course, would be to commence the building of cells a and b, the first atom of material laid down for these cells being in the angle between cells 2 and 1, or 2and 3. The position of the insect in building cell a I suppose to be in the direction of the partition between cells 1 and 2 and across cell 5; that for building cell b would be in the direction of the partition between cells 2 and 3 and across cell 4, Cell 2, then, is enclosed at all parts, and has assumed a truly hexagonal form, and to complete this hexagon the insect has worked alternately in cell 2 and in cells a and 6, But a repetition of part of the work would have produced the same effect on cell 2. The axis of the insect being in the direction a 5, and suitable for building cell a, the insect might work alternately inside and outside of a part of cell 2, and thus produce the straight partition between cell a and cell 2. Again, the position of the insect being altered, as it would be, to build cell b, that is in the direction b 4, by the same operation the partition between cells 6 and 2 would become straightened. At the same time the same position enables the insect to work alternately likewise in cells 3 and 6, and to produce a flat partition between them. The inner half of the circumference of cell 3 has been converted into three sides of a hexagon; externally it furnishes two entering angles d and e, Let the work be repeated as before described, * Under different conditions to those above indicated—as, for instance, in the construction of the nest-covering—the insect evidently does not keep its body fixed in position while at work. Here the work is performed with shifting centres, and segments of very large circles are exhibited in all parts of the work. 128 Mr. G. R. Waterhouse on the the insect working with the axis of its body in the same relative direction to the cells; say, first, in the direction d 2, and, secondly, in that of e 2; then two more flat sides to cell 3 may be pro- duced by simple repetition of similar work ; and, lastly, the side f 4& being now straight, furnishes a position through which the insect may operate upon the side which still remained untouched. Thus it is possible, by mere repetition of similar work under similar conditions, to alter a cell having a circular section into an hexagonal cell; the cell in question being only in contact with two other cells. In the foregoing it is assumed that the wasp is at work ona plane surface—on a piece of comb in which the openings of the cells are all on the same level, and it brings about conditions which verY NEARLY accord with those which actually present themselves. The surface of the forming comb, however, is not a plane one, but is more or less convex, and the young cell on the margin of the comb, as I have had to point out, opens out obliquely, dipping away from the level of the next inner series of cells; and it is obvious in this case that the stretch of the insect would be more or less restricted. ‘The insect, for example, which is at work in cell a, might reach to the right and to the left on the outer surface of cells 1 and 2, but it would only be to some point short of the centre of the exposed surface of cells 1 and 2, and some- thing shorter than the side of the hexagon ultimately attained. And if the wasp were to work (as it very often will do) on the outer surface of a cell having the position of cell 2, but without having the adjoining cells a and 6 in contact, it would have the power of flattening the once-rounded outer wall, from the entering angle on either side towards, but not quite to, the centre of the free margin, and there would, therefore, be no true angle formed at that part; and this corresponds exactly with the conditions ordinarily presented. I have now described the cells constructed by the wasp, and those of allied insects; and I have likewise described the cells of certain bees, and compared together the works of these two tribes of insects. In so doing I have endeavoured to set down the leading facts exactly as they present themselves, and not to be influenced by any theoretical views. Subsequently, I have endeavoured to harmonise those facts, and this part of the com- munication only, I think, can in any way be regarded as theo- retical. Here I may, and probably have, erred in endeavouring to explain too much; but setting aside certain minor points, I Formation of the Cells of Bees and Wasps. 129 believe I have clearly shown that there is one common principle in action exhibited in the work of all these insects—I might include the work of other tribes of insects, or I might point to the works of other animals, the bird’s nest for instance—and that is the principle of working in segments of circles: that the hexa- gonal form of the cells of certain bees and wasps may, and does, arise out of this mode of action when under certain con- ditions: that those conditions are, that the cells are so com- menced that their natural circumferences, as the work proceeds, are either simply brought into contact with each other, or that the cells are so placed that the (we will say theoretical) cireum- ferences must intersect. Contact with adjoining cells then is an essential condition to bring about the hexagonal form,* but for this result it is not necessary that a hexagonal cell should be completely surrounded by other cells. * As J have before pointed out in this Society’s rooms, See Proc. Ent. Soc. 1858, p. 17. (2 ASI ) III. On the Construction of Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. By Freperick Smita, late Pres. Ent. Soc. {Read 4th April, 1864.] Ar the March meeting of this Society, Mr. Waterhouse pro- pounded his theory of the construction of hexagonal cells by bees and wasps, and, supposing his to be the true solution of the problem, we are asked to accept it as explanatory of the manner in which all social insects form them. For years past I have had constant opportunities of examining nests of the social Hymen- optera, and I also formed a beautiful assortment of specimens for my own study; the result has been a conviction on my own part, that a different process obtains in different species; not that each particular species differs from all others, but that a variety of modes is observable amongst them in constructing hexagonal cells, A mud-cell was exhibited to us by Mr. Waterhouse, and its mode of construction explained; whilst building this cell, the insect was stated to have always placed itself in one fixed position when at work, and the diameter of its cell was said to have been determined by the distance the insect could reach when thus at work. Now in that particular instance it no doubt was so; but had a hemispherical excavation of a similar diameter been made by a species of Sphex, by Ammophila lutaria for instance, that insect would have gone to work in a very different way. dAm- mophila is three times the size of the bee, but she would have moved round and round in different directions, until the same result was produced. Large insects frequently construct cells of smaller diameter than others built by smaller insects ; and individuals of the same species may be observed at one time laboriously constructing cell after cell, whilst another is seen to avail itself of some ready-formed cavity, if equally adapted to its purposes. I am here alluding to solitary species ; but I will show you this evening, that hive-bees will avail themselves of extraneous aid, and that if furnished with a series of pyramidal bases, they will readily erect hexagonal walls thereon; and 1 think you will see, that bees can form hexagonal- shaped cells without working in a circular direction at all, and VOL. 1, THIRD SERIES, PART Il,—AvGUST, 1864, L 132 Mr. F. Smith on the Construction of also without making circular excavations so close to each other as to necessitate the transformation into hexagonal cells, but which were intended to be cylindrical. You were invited, at our last meeting, to arrive at the con- clusion that all hexagonal cells were constructed in accordance with what is called the circular theory; that cell after cell arose from consecutively constructed hemispherical bases. An ex- amination of a large number of nests has enabled me to ascertain that cells are constructed upon hemispherical, oval, pyramidal and also upon plane or flat bases. I have observed that cells are built upon bases consecutively formed, and also that the bases of entire combs are prepared before a single cell is constructed. Examples of each I shall lay before you, and having done so, I shall be much interested to have it shown, that all these various modes of building are in perfect accordance with the theory pro- pounded to this Society at its last meeting. Some writers upon the wonders of the hive have endeavoured to show that the hexagonal form of cell is, in some degree, neces- sitated for reasons that appear to me to have little weight. Saving of space is put forth as one! Surely not saving of space simply as such, without some collateral bearing, because the bees in a natural state are not constrained to occupy any particular-sized cavity. Then the saving of wax is supposed to operate, because wax is said to be a precious material secreted and elaborated in the stomach of the bee; and also in consequence of its being produced only by a certain class of working bees; but we must not lose sight of the fact, that hexagonal cells are not all built of wax; the scrapings of plants or of wood, used by many species of wasps, are not a scarce material; neither can mud, which is used by others, be said to be a precious or a rare material. ‘Then as to the saving of labour, 1 cannot see that there is any better proof of this at all determining the desira- bility of the hexagonal-shaped cell; if honey-bees were left to their own resources, in localities to which they are indigenous, I believe that, like all other insects, they would just perform the amount of labour necessary to carry out the ends for which they are designed in nature; at the same time I see occasionally indi- viduals of the same species, one labouring day by day in the con- struction of a nidus adapted to its purposes, whilst another avails itself of one ready made, but totally different in every respect to that formed by her Jaborious sister, but one that will answer her purpose; and in such instances I recognise a saving of labour. No, the hexagonal form of cell is the plan laid down by the Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. 133 great Architect, and the bees are the builders that carry out His designs. In the year 1858 this subject was brought before the Society by Mr. Tegetmeier, and at that time Mr. Waterhouse explained the nature of the circular theory, which, in his opinion, clearly elu- cidated the principle upon which all hexagonal cells are built by bees and wasps. My own observations on the mode of con- struction adopted by wasps, I found, in what was then assumed as essential to the formation of hexagonal cells, directly opposed, and I attempted, with such material as I at that time possessed, to combat the theory, which appeared to me inapplicable to the building of wasps ; and I had the pleasure of finding, shortly after- wards, that one of our most intelligent inquirers held the same opinion. Since that period Mr. Brown has advocated Mr. Waterhouse’s theory in the “ Zoologist,” and the former gentleman assumes it as a fact, that no bee or wasp has been known to construct a single isolated hexagonal cell ; contact with other cells, if I under- stand Mr. Brown rightly, being the essential condition which influences the hexagonal form; and if so, as regards complete cells, I take it for granted that it equally influences any portion of a cell that is raised into an isolated position; therefore I feel that I am warranted in assuming that no portion of a hexagonal cell can possibly be carried up above the surrounding cells, if the premises are infallible. Mr. Brown gives it as his opinion, that “every cell during its progress is impinged upon by six other cells, and as all progress at the same time, the united attempts of the workers to avoid interspaces and to expend no more wax than is necessary to the making of firm walls, produce inevitably the hexagonal structure.” Mr. Tegetmeier has given it as the result of his experience, “ that the outer portion of each cell is cylindrical until a fresh cell is added on its outer side, when the cell becomes an inner one, and its outer sides transformed into a hexagon.” When this subject was last brought before the Society, I ex- pressed my opinion to be, that the wasp commenced her comb with the intent instinctively to build hexagonal cells; since that time, I have had many opportunities of examining nests of wasps and bees, and the result is, if possible, a more confirmed belief in my original opinion. I shall have the pleasure of offering to your notice a number of most interesting examples of the architecture of wasps, and of pointing out the facts upon which my opinions are based; should I fail to prove my case to the satisfaction of a L2 134 Mr. F. Smith on the Construction of single individual, I still think the exhibition of the different methods adopted by wasps in building their combs cannot fail to prove interesting. It must not be supposed that all bees, or that all wasps, are equally skilful in constructing hexagonal cells; such is in fact far from being the case; some species, like unskilful masons, produce very unfinished or rustic work. This observation applies to wax- working bees, as well as to paper- and pasteboard-working wasps. The cells of Trigona are rude and unskilful in construction, when compared with the elegant and highly-finished structures erected by the hive-bee. Amongst the Vespid@, the wasps belonging to the extensive genus Polistes, that construct cells of a papery con- sistency, are rude and unskilful in their work, when compared with those belonging to the genus Chartergus, which construct cells of stiff cardboard. Wax is the material of which all honey-bees construct their cells; it is of a soft plastic nature, and is capable of being moulded, cut or scraped into any shape with ease; not so the pasteboard of wasps. The material of which the paper or cardboard is composed varies in different species; some use scrapings of sound timber, this is the case with the Vespa Norvegica; the nests of this wasp have a strength and durability adapting them for exposure to the vicissitudes of weather, being suspended to the branches of trees and shrubs; the hornet and other wasps, on the contrary, select decayed wood, consequently their nests are exceedingly fragile, and would soon perish if exposed. Many exotic wasps use materials of a vegetable nature, scrapings of the stems of plants; such is the material selected by pasteboard-working species ; so firm and strong is the outer case, as well as the cells, of these wasps, that it is a difficult matter to tear them asunder. A few species build their pensile habitations entirely of clay, some nests being as much as eight or nine inches in diameter, and of an oblong, or egg-shaped, ani: a specimen of an unfinished comb I shall Thy before you. We will now examine a little into the differences observable in the architecture of bees and wasps. Honey-bees, as you all know, build double combs, and these depend from the roof of the hive; the cells are consequently in a horizontal position. Trigone (stingless honey-bees) construct single combs; they are arranged horizontally, precisely like those of the common wasp, the mouths of the cells being consequently downwards; the combs, like those of the wasp, are supported by short columns of wax, or a material closely resembling wax, and of an equally soft Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. 135 and ductile quality. Let me now direct your attention to the nests of various species of social wasps. The first which I will mention is the nest of IJcaria guttalipennis; this is the nest to which I referred at a former meeting, as being figured in my Catalogue of the Vespide, and I incorrectly described it as being constructed of a single row of hexagonal cells; it con- sists of a double row, the number of cells being ten; I now direct your attention to the fact that all the cells are perfectly hexagonal, the exterior planes being as beautifully finished as those in contact with the inner planes of the opposing cells. I have placed a drawing of this nest (numbered 1) in the box on the table, and I particularly wish you to observe, that the first cell is carried up in a perfectly hexagonal form above the adjoining cells; a proof that, if wasps never build perfect isolated hexagonal cells, they certainly possess the capability of doing so. The exterior of all the cells, as I before observed, is hexagonal, not cylindri- cal until fresh cells are added on the outer side, as was observed to be the case in combs of the hive-bee by Mr. Tegetmeier. (See PIRI: fig. B.) I now invite observation to a nest, numbered 2, in the box of specimens; the portions exhibited are those of the exterior ofa nest of Nectarina Lecheguana. The nest of this wasp is of globular shape, and is sometimes not less than sixteen or eighteen inches in diameter; the foundation is a single comb, inclosed in a globular envelope; on this envelope the wasps commence series of cells on all sides; these cells are covered in patches by en- velopes,—the envelope always serving as the foundation of a fresh series of cells: a repetition of the above process, on all sides of the continually-increasing nest, results in structures such as I have described. Now you will observe, that all the cells constructed by these wasps are built upon the flat outer en- velopes, and if you examine the specimens exhibited, you will see, in some instances, the faintest ground-plan of the hexagonal cell intended to be raised, traced on the fiat foundation. No. 4 is a portion of a nest of Tatua morio, perhaps the most interesting specimen that I offer to your notice; one that proves, to my mind, the primary-intention of the wasp, instinc- tively to build cells with exactly six sides, Yatua morio is a pasteboard-maker ; she constructs a bell-shaped nest, the outer envelope being very strong and tough; this would appear to be the first portion constructed, and next the flat floors upon which the cells are built ; these floors are carried across the entire diameter of the nest, and attached to the outer envelope on all sides, each floor having a small circular opening left on one and the same 136 Mr. F. Smith on the Construction of side, serving as a passage for the wasps from floor to floor, the entrance being at the bottom of the nest. I have sketched the section of one of these nests, and No. 4 in the box of speci- mens shows a portion of one of the floors, and also some un- finished cells. The nest sketched consists of nine chambers, all the floors are finished, but on the six upper ones only cells are constructed ; a few are just commenced on the seventh. I have seen nests with cells on three floors only. In the nest sketched, the two lower floors are unoccupied, not a single cell having been commenced. In the box of specimens you will see one of these foundation floors without cells, and another upon which a number of the most beautiful hexagonal cells were in the course of con- struction. Ifthe foundations of the planes of the exterior cells are examined, you will find one, two or more planes, clearly traced out as it were upon a ground-plan; if plans, so self- evident of intention, do not prove the instinctive purpose of the architect, I cannot imagine anything to my mind more perfectly conclusive. (See Pl. XIII. fig. D.) It may not be known to some members of the Society, that in order to expedite the building of honey-combs, it is a common practice with bee-keepers in Germany to furnish hives with artificial foundations for the cells; these consist of sheets of wax, upon which is impressed a series of pyramidal hollows; in fact, the counterpart of a comb built by the bees themselves, entirely deprived of the cell-walls; and it is from such a piece of comb that the casts for the artificial foundations are obtained. A piece of casting of this description I lay before you, and I particularly call your attention to the commencement of the outer cells; you will see, in some instances, a single plane of the hexagonal cell com- menced, in others two or three are in progress; here you have a ground-plan supplied, or, [ may say, the foundations of the habitations ready prepared, upon which the labourers are to raise the walls, and you may see how admirably they have done it, Instinct enables the bee to construct hexagonal cells without teaching, and, we are told, in one undeviating manner. Surely the example before us exhibits an amount of intelligence on the part of the bees in availing themselves of such adventitious aid. Must we not henceforth, when speaking of the marvels of the hive or the vespiary, erase from our vocabulary such terms as blind instinct; and must we not cease to stigmatize the bee as a mere machine ? Before passing on to other considerations, let us here ask our- selves, what assumption naturally arises in the mind when we see, Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. 137 as on the sheet of artificial bases exhibited, that the bees have at once availed themselves of this adventitious aid? does it not almost naturally occur to us, that these hexagonal ground-plans must be exactly such plans as they are accustomed to erect their hexagonal cells upon? does it not impress upon our minds the possibility, and even something more than that, the probability, that in whatever manner bees first commence their work, for instance, by making cylindrical excavations, does it not appear almost certain, that the bases of several cells are formed, and that each is perfectly pyramidal in shape, before a single wall is com- menced? Such must be the conclusion arrived at by all who believe that insects can only work in one direction, and I think it must be admitted, that the very fact of the bees at once accepting the plan furnished, argues strongly in favour of the supposition that bees, when left entirely to their own resources, construct a precisely similar basement. I would now direct attention to a large piece of a comb of the common wasp, Vespa vulgaris, and also to another of drone cells of the hive-bee, Zpis mellifica, and I would point to a very marked difference in the construction of the cells; those of the hive-bee have always, whether finished or unfinished, a thickened rim of wax, the sides of the cells themselves are so thin and brittle that a constant traversing of the working bees over them would other- wise break and more or less destroy them. It is quite evident then, that whenever an addition is made to the height of a cell, this thickened rim must be scraped down to the same thinness as the planes of the hexagon beneath. This rim is always found on the cells, even when no further addition is intended to be made. The wasp, you will observe, never requires a strengthening rim, the walls of her cells are carried up in hexagonal planes, to me, as evidently as if constructed by the hand of a mason. Does then the fact of the bee always adopting the thickened rim indicate a different process of building, whereby the hexa- gonal-shaped cell is ultimately produced? or is it simply a neces- sity for insuring the safety of her work? Had it heen removed when the cell was finished, I should have been led to suppose, that the cells of the hive bee were built by a different process ; but, as it is always present, it rather appears to indicate the neces- sity of the rim as a mode of securing and strengthening the work. So much, indeed, does the hexagonal principle appear to guide wasps in their operations, that one species, Apoica pallida, not only builds hexagonal cells, but she also, occasionally, constructs the entire comb itself of a hexagonal shape; now, here is no 138 Mr. F. Smith on the Construction of compelling power, here are no adjoining circular combs, forcing the production of this particular hexagonal-shaped comb ; the comb of this wasp consists of a single layer attached to trunks or branches of trees, &c., without any exterior envelope. I cannot, when I see such beautiful examples of the architecture of wasps, come to any other conclusion, than that, in instances such as the one I have just mentioned, it was the intention of the wasps to build hexagonal-shaped combs, and also their intention that those combs should consist entirely of hexagonal-shaped cells. I direct your attention to a small nest of Polistes tepidus ; this nest appears to illustrate, and to establish as a fact, a supposition that has frequently occurred to me, namely, that the development of the larve of Hymenoptera to the perfect condition must be a process much more rapidly carried on in tropical countries than in temperate ones, and that this rapidity of development ne- cessitates the more rapid construction of those cells in which the first eggs are deposited. The nest before you, I think, is an exemplification of this idea: five cells are completed, each having served as the nursery of a wasp; twelve additional cells are com- menced, and are in different stages of progress. Now I would call your attention to one fact, that the circumference of the un- finished cell is not carried up equally, or to the same height on all sides; you will observe that the two planes of each hexagonal cell that attach the unfinished cells to the finished ones are elevated obliquely considerably above the other planes; when any cell is carried up to the height required, all the planes have an equal elevation ; therefore, it is clearly the case that the two inner planes that attached the unfinished cells to the finished ones must be first completed, leaving the two outer planes to be finished afterwards. This mode of construction is never, so far as my observation enables me to judge, to be observed in combs built. by a populous community ; in such cases, all the sides of the cells are carried up simultaneously. I also exhibit a comb of the common wasp, Vespa vulgaris (No. 8), it isexceedingly interesting from the fact of its consisting of cells of different sizes; about three-fourths of the comb are occupied by cells of workers ; at this stage of formation it became necessary to construct cells of a larger diameter adapted for females ; this could not have been effected at once without a total disarrangement of their usual beautiful uniformity, but it could be done by degrees; thus we find the bases of about four rows of cells elongated, the parallel planes of the hexagons being also elongated, and thus by degrees the enlargement of the cells is Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. 139 effected. The cells beyond the intermediate elongated ones will be found to be regular hexagons of the increased dimensions re- quired. When I see such a departure from the usual mode of building as this, I recognize an intelligence that forces me to ac- knowledge in the wasp a creature that evidently designs an end to be accomplished, not a creature that would instinctively construct cylindrical cells, but whose labours always eventuate in the pro- duction of hexagonal ones, this result being dependent upon un- controllable circumstances which always present themselves. (See Pl. XIII. fig. C.) Five years ago, when the circular theory was brought before this Society, it did not appear in the same guise as now; it was then surrounded by certain collateral conditions, which I was led to believe were corner-stones of the ingenious edifice. Combina- tion of labour was deemed essential, and at one period it was supposed that no solitary bee or wasp could construct hexagonal cells ; this latter supposition proved to be a fallacy when I in- stanced the queen wasp as a solitary builder. In 1862, the Rev. Samuel Haughton, in a paper read before the Natural History Society of Dublin, says the hexagonal form of cell ‘ may be ac- counted for simply by the mechanical pressure of the insects against each other during the formation of the cell. In conse- quence of the instinct that compels them to work with reference to a plane, and of the cylindrical form of the insects’ bodies, the cells must be hexagons.” This theory is, I think, at once disproved by the instance of the solitary wasp. Another condition, essential (as I understood it) to the stability of the circular theory, was that no cell could possibly be con- structed of the hexagonal form into which the builder could not insert its head. I exhibit the foundation comb of a wasp, and also the insect that constructed it (No. 6 in the box of specimens); I have taken off the head of the wasp and placed it over one of the cells, in order to show the impossibility of its being inserted. The next condition that formerly existed was a circumstance that was supposed to regulate or determine the width of the planes of the hexagon ; the explanation was this—a working bee was supposed to place itself exactly opposite the centre of one of the planes, and then fixing itself steadily in the proper position, the width of the plane would be the exact distance that the bee cut or reached with its mandibles when turning its head as upon a pivot. Now this at first sight appears a very ingenious solution ; apparently it accounts admirably for the uniform exactitude ob- servable in the width of all the planes; the uniformity of size in 140 Mr. F. Smith on the Construction of the bees themselves also appears to add to the completeness of the theory ; but it soon occurs to us that the same bees afterwards construct the larger cells of the drones. And we are no better off if we look into the nest of the wasp, for we find the large queen constructing the small cells of the workers, and the workers constructing the large cells of males and females. I shall only mention one other position, still, I believe, upheld by the adherents to the circular theory; it is that no bee or wasp ever builds an isolated hexagonal cell, or a cell of hexagonal form carried up above the adjoining cells. If you examine the nest of Icaria guttatipennis, and also that of Polistes Tasmaniensis, both of which are exhibited, I think you will be satisfied that in- stances to the contrary are before you. I would also invite attention to a nest of Vespa Norvegica (No. 7), in which a central hexagonal cell is only raised to about one-third of its in- tended height, and has only four planes of the hexagon im- pinged upon by adjoining cells, the fifth and sixth cells not being commenced ; this example will prove that the hexagonal form does not necessitate the impingement of six adjoining cells for its production, a position that has been laid down as being absolutely necessary. No doubt it will be said that I have not shown the principle of the circular theory to be inapplicable to the construction of all hexagonal cells, but I contend that I have done so in several instances—in the nests of Nectarina Lecheguana and of Tatua morio, both wasps that erect hexagons upon flat bases; I have pointed out the fact that the commencements of single planes of the hexagon are to be found, in other cases of two or of three planes, and these beginnings exhibit not a trace of the circle any more than one, two, three or more pieces of masonry. I have shown that the bases of the cells of the common wasp, that constructs her cells upon consecutively formed bases, are hemi- spherical ; in the hive we know they are pyramidal; and the bases of the transition cells, from those of the worker-wasp to those destined to contain females, partake more or less of the oval form. Mr. Brown in his Essay remarks that “ hive-bees produce their ordinary comb-cells by the united efforts of many individuals. Owing to this circumstance, and also to their never building up cells at the margins of combs unflanked by the foundations of other cells, they afford us, when so employed, no opportunity of observing the fundamental scheme upon which they build.” My opinions are formed entirely upon observation of different modes of building ; my conclusicns have been forced upon me by facts, Hexagonal Cells by Bees and Wasps. 141 in my opinion, conclusive of the primary intention of the builders to erect hexagonal cells. L have examined nests of wasps in every stage of progress; I have found some species laying a separate foundation for each cell, wasps as well as bees; I have found some species of wasps constructing the entire foundations of a complete comb before a single wall of a cell was erected; and I see bees furnished with a complete floor of artificial foundations, at once adopting this ad- ventitious aid. ‘Then, again, I observe in nests of Yatua moro, and of some other species of wasps, the walls of one, two, three or more planes of the hexagon more or less raised ; and, under these circumstances, what is the conclusion at which I naturally arrive? Why that all hexagonal cells are not constructed upon a circular principle, and that the primary idea of all social bees and wasps is not to produce cylindrical cells with hemispherical bases. 1 know not whether any one besides myself has arrived at a similar conclusion, or whether I stand alone in the opinion I have endeavoured to explain. Appenpum.—It having been suggested that the nest of Icaria’ gultatipennis, of which I could only exhibit a sketch, might pos- sibly be only the portion of a nest ina state of demolition, I have re-examined it, and can vouch that such is not the case; only a few of the cells being carried up to their full height and lined with the exuvie of the larva. It has also been stated that wasps are well known to destroy their old nests; such a circumstance is quite unknown to me, and I do not remember to have heard such a statement previously made. In order to place clearly before my readers the fact of Icaria building hexagonal cells with exterior portions of the cells angu- lated, I have had a drawing of a nest of another species made, in which none of the cells are carried up to the required height. (See Pl. XIII. fig. A.) All the nests of this genus of wasp ap- pear to be constructed in the same manner, the sharpness and beauty of the hexagon varying according to the skill of the par- ticular species. I exhibited a nest of Polistes Tasmaniensis in which a single cell was carried up above the surrounding cells, and it has been objected to as not being perfectly hexagonal: I have already stated that all bees and wasps are not equally skilful workmen, those belonging to the genus Polistes being instanced as “ rude 142 Mr. F. Smith on the Construction of Hexagonal Cells. and unskilful;” I admit that the elevated portion of the cell is not perfectly sharp and angular at the corners, but it is sufficiently so to prove the truth of my assertion. I recall attention to the cells of Jcaria, which are exteriorly perfect in form, true hex- agons, and I direct attention to the cells, particularly the exterior ones, in the figure of the nest of Zatua morio; it is to these I would point, and not to the least perfect example, as proofs of the fact of some species of wasps finishing the exterior portions of their cells in a perfectly hexagonal shape.—F’. S., July, 1864. edase) IV. On the Reversion and Restoration of the Silkworm. By Captain Tuomas Hurvron, F.G.S., of Mussooree, N. W. India. (Communicated by Mr. Freperic Moore.) [Read 2nd May, 1864.] Introductory Remarks. For many years past the utmost anxiety has prevailed on the European Continent, and more especially in France, in regard to the condition of the common silkworm, known to science as the Bombyx Mori, the constitution of the worm appearing to be so thoroughly weakened and undermined, by diseases arising from a long and uniform course of domestication, bad nourishment and other prejudicial influences, as to excite the most lively appre- hensions lest the insect should suddenly become extinct. That such apprehensions are far from groundless may be seen in the fact that one form of disease by which the worm is attacked, known in France as ‘‘ la muscardine,” is said by M. Guérin- Ménéville annually to destroy more than one-fourth of the worms; and it has been clearly shown by this eminent Entomologist, and by several experienced cultivators of silk, that the crop has, within the last ten years, dwindled down to about one-half of what it used to be. Various remedies have, of course, from time to time been tried for the purpose of arresting the progress of disease, sometimes with partial and temporary effect, but more generally without any success at all. In consequence of these maladies, and their inability to arrest them, the French, with prudent and praiseworthy foresight, are using every possible means to introduce and acclimatize other species, which may, in some measure, fill the commercial void which would be created by the loss of the common silkworm. Under these circumstances it occurred to me, that while assisting our continental neighbours in the introduction of such wild species as occur within our Western Himalayan forests, I might as well at the same time endeavour if possible to reclaim and restore to health the most valuable species of the whole; and, consequently, for several years past I have studied and experimented upon the Bombyx Mori and its domesticated congeners, with a degree of success which I now purpose to unfold. 144 Captain T. Hutton on the In experimenting upon the worm I have not confined my efforts within the narrow limits of an endeavour to cure particular phases of disease, but to effect a permanent benefit in the restoration of a healthy and vigorous constitution, which, if accomplished, as I think it may be, will of itself not only cast out this or that par- ticular phase of disease, but all the diseases under which the worm is now labouring ; and I am fully convinced that until such radical change has been wrought, it will be but time and labour thrown away to seek to cure particular maladies as they appear. Hitherto the results of my experiments have been such as to warrant my entertaining the most sanguine hopes of ultimate success, provided the same system be carried on for a few years longer, when it will of course depend upon the cultivator to main- tain the advantages thus secured. Of all the groups comprised within the family of the Bombycide that in which the genus Bombyx is contained, is, perhaps, in a commercial point of view, the most interesting and the most valuable. This genus contains, besides a few wild indigenous species widely scattered over the continent of India, all those long domesticated species popularly known as “ silkworms,” which were centuries ago imported into Europe from the northern provinces of China, where for many centuries previously they had likewise been kept in a state of domestication. Having, however, already, in a paper entitled ‘ Notes on the Silkworms of India,” entered somewhat fully into the history of the Chinese species, J] need not here travel over the same ground, but shall call attention to facts not previously noticed, and en- deavour, after exposing the folly of insisting, as some still ob- stinately do, upon the healthy and vigorous constitution of the insects, to show by how very simple a method the worms may be induced to revert from their present artificial and moribund con- dition to one of vigour and permanent health, Discovery of the Silkworm. According to the commonly received chronology the discovery of the silkworm in China was made about the year B.c. 2640; and the means of reeling off, or unwinding the fibre from the cocoon, being also discovered, the regular domestication of the insect at once commenced. Whether the species then discovered was, in reality, that to which naturalists have since assigned the name of Bombyx Mori, or whether the discovery of more than one species then occurred, we have now no means of positively ascertaining; nor, indeed, does it Restoration of the Silkworm. 145 much signify, as for the present, at least, it is with that known and cultivated in Europe as an annual that we have to deal; but from a paragraph quoted by Mr. F. Moore from the ‘“ Account of the Ceremonies of the China Dynasty,” it would appear as if more than one species was under cultivation at the time when the « Account” was written, inasmuch as it contains an allusion toa second crop of silk, when it says,—* the officer who adjusted the price of horses forbad the people to rear a second breed of silk- worms in one season.” Now, whatever the Bombyx Mori may be when cultivated in Cashmere, Persia or Europe, it may un- doubtedly be made, in a suitable temperature, to produce an autumnal brood; this, however, refers to the worm after having been submitted to my experiments for two or three years, and when, indeed, it may be said to be fast travelling back to a state of nature. The same thing occurs likewise with regard to another species which is also an annual, as far as I can learn, in all coun- tries, except Mussooree, in the Western Himalaya; this is the Boro Pooloo of Bengal, and Bombyx textor (nobis), which, like the Bombyx Mori, yields an autumnal crop when treated in a particular temperature. This fact, indeed, has led some people to declare that the two are but varieties of the same species, and that in a state of domestication all may, by the application of certain tem- peratures, be made to yield several crops of silk annually. This, however, may fairly be denounced as pure nonsence, the occur- rence of the two crops arising solely out of the fact of our having in autumn a recurrence of the spring temperature, or what may be called a double season. Hence, since a particular degree of tem- perature causes the egg to hatch, whenever the season returns in which that temperature is produced, the young worm is of course excluded from the egg. It is quite possible then, and even pro- bable, that these species may originally have done the same in their native country, and the reason why they have ceased to be double-brooded in Europe and other localities is to be attributed solely to the uncongenial temperature, which is sometimes too high, at other times too low; and with respect to those species which are termed “monthly” worms, if it were really the case that the number of crops is due to cultivation in warm climates, it ought to follow that, when domesticated in a cold climate, the frequent succession of silk crops should become less frequent, and the worm give symptoms of reverting to its old habits. Such, however, I have not found to be the case; for although I have succeeded in obtaining two broods from Bombyx Mori of Cash- mere and B, teator of China, yet the small monthly.China worm 146 Captain T. Hutton on the (B. Sinensis, nob.) has continued yielding crop after crop even to the middle of December, when the eggs were again deposited in a temperature of 53° of Fahrenheit. Hence I adhere with good reason to the opinion that all are naturally distinct species. Con- sequently, as all the other accounts, quoted by Mr. Moore and other authorities, lead to the conclusion that one spring crop only was produced by the worm originally cultivated in China, it will be well to allow the annual species domesticated in Europe as B. Mori, to retain that distinctive title, more especially when we consider that as the people were forbidden to rear—not merely a second crop of silk, but— a second breed of worms,’ the stock, if double-brooded, would speedily have been destroyed and lost by such interdiction. This, then, would tend to prove that the worm under cultivation was an annual only, and that the prohibition extended to other species. Introduction into Europe. From the year before Christ 2,640 until 550, or thereabouts, of the Christian era, the domestication of the worm appears to have been exclusively confined to China, severe punishments being inflicted upon any one who ventured to attempt its exportation into other countries, when, at length, about the latter year, through the Jaudable zeal of missionary monks who had visited China and there learnt the mode of cultivation, the eggs were secretly con- veyed into Europe and presented to the Emperor Justinian. Constitution impaired by Domestication. Thus, for a period of more than 3,000 years, the so-called cul- tivation of the worm had remained exclusively in Chinese hands. What wonder, then, if the constitution of the insect had during that time been gradually undermined by a course of imperfect feeding, close and tainted atmosphere and various other enervating causes, until, at length, when imported into the West, it no longer retained its natural vigour, health and original characteristics, but had become enfeebled, degenerated and sluggish, by a long system of interbreeding with debilitated stock, and rendered liable, by the loss of constitution, to a multitude of diseases ! From the time of its introduction into Europe, the treatment it has experienced has been, with some modifications, nearly the same as that pursued in China; so that for an uninterrupted period of no less than 4,500 years, the worm has had to contend against all those unnatural and purely artificial influences arising from a state of domestication, which we erroneously persist in Restoration of the Silkworm. 147 terming cultivation, without one single renewal or infusion of the original healthy and natural stock from which the race has descended! ‘Truly has it, as Darwin would say, undergone “ the struggle for existence!” One would almost be tempted to think, that the object of cul- tivators had actually been the destruction of the insect, for in what other department would breeders so long have neglected to infuse new blood into their domestic stock? Is it not a well understood and long-established fact, that, whether among animals or plants, an occasional renewal of seed and re-infusion of the original stamina is found to be absolutely necessary for the preservation of health, and of that particular standard of per- fection which it is thought desirable to maintain? And yet with the domesticated Bombyx Mori, this necessary precaution has been uniformly neglected for 4,500 years! What wonder, then, that under the combined effects of bad and scanty food, want of sufficient light and ventilation, too high a temperature, and with the constant and unvarying interbreeding of a debilitated stock, the insect should have become subject to a multitude of maladies, and threaten, at no distant period, to become extinct! By here condemning the system of interbreeding, I must, how- ever, guard against the possibility of being misunderstood, for I am well aware that in France a very senseless outcry has been raised in some quarters against the interbreeding of brother and sister, and other near relatives, as if, in a state of natural freedom, such a proceeding was not the general and authorized rule. What I condemn, and in this I am happy to find myself sup- ported by such weighty authority as that of M. Guérin-Ménéville, is not the intercourse of near relations, but the incessant inter- breeding of diseased and debilitated individuals, which, as “like produces like,” cannot possibly do otherwise than perpetuate and aggravate both disease and debility. Where brothers, sisters and cousins are all healthy and of sound constitution, no bad consequences will ensue from their interbreeding, for such is the established plan upon which nature acts; but where disease exists, the breeding from two deteriorated individuals, whether they be nearly or distantly related, will only add fuel to the fire, and perpetuate, and even aggravate, disease. I assert, then, that there is no such thing now in existence as a perfectly healthy domesticated stock of silkworms, the colour proving, beyond all doubt, that the constitution has been utterly destroyed, and the wonder rather is, that the worms have con- tinued to live so long, and to yield such good returns under such VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART Il.—AuGUST, 1864, M 148 Captain T. Hutton on the a constant struggle against adverse circumstances; for it seems quite evident, since naturalists have never recorded the colours of the caterpillar to be otherwise than ashy or creamy-white, that even so Jong ago as the time of the Emperor Justinian, the true colour of the worm had already ‘been obliterated by the centuries of mismanagement to which the Chinese had subjected the insect. It is true that the occasional occurrence of dark- coloured worms among the general brood has been observed, yet these occurrences are always spoken of as exceptional cases indicating variety arising from domestication, rather than as denoting, what in reality is the fact, an attempted return, on the part of nature, to the original colours and characteristics of the species. Under no other supposition than this does it appear possible to account for the error committed by the older naturalists; and, consequently, I again assert, with the greatest confidence, and shall presently prove, that the whiteness of the worm is to be regarded solely as a positive indication of the loss of constitution, and that the species, in its natural colours, has yet to be described. The Fruitlessness of seeking for healthy Seed. I shall probably be told that learned and experienced men have occasionally been sent from Italy and France, in order to collect fresh seed (as it is termed) for the purpose of renovating the sickly stock of Europe by the re-infusion of a healthier and more vigorous constitution from the worms of India and of China. Such an assertion, to a certain extent, would, no doubt, be true, since it cannot be denied, that a search for healthier stock has often been made, though never with success, from the simple fact, that whether in Europe, Persia, India or China, the worms are all equally degenerated, or if indeed there be a difference yet perceptible, it is altogether in favour of the European race. We ean all ‘call spirits from the vasty deep—but will they come when we do call?” Had a search been instituted in China for the nild worm in its original state of freedom, great benefit would no doubt have ensued from its discovery; but if we reflect that the worm, even in its native country, has, like that of Europe, been immemorially of a pale colour, a Chinese cultivator on being asked for the original wild stock would at once acknowledge that he knew the worm under no other aspect, and in no other con- dition, than that in which for so many centuries it had been cul- tivated by his forefathers, and the idea of its having possibly Restoration of the Silkworm. 149 changed or lost its colour under domestication, would in all pro- bability never enter into the head either of the Chinaman or of his interrogator. Seeing then, as I shall presently show, that the Eastern is infinitely inferior to the European stock, the crossing with seed selected either in India or in China would only be adding to the disease which already threatens the West with such disastrous consequences. Nature of Experiments explained. I may, however, be asked, what proof I can adduce of disease and change of colour? As regards the existence of disease there is no occasion to reply, as the fact is only too well known; but as regards the loss of colour, I have abundant evidence now before me. All those, indeed, who have had the least experience in the rearing of the silkworm must have perceived the occasional occur- rence among the brood of one or more dark-grey or blackish- brindled worms, contrasting strongly and curiously with the pale sickly hue of the majority. These, by the French cultivators, are called “vers tigrés” or “ zébrés,” that is, ‘tiger or zebra striped,’ and are regarded as a mere variety. Yet these are, in fact, the original and natural worms ! My attention having long since been arrested by this circum- stance, it at length occurred to me to endeavour by a series of experiments to ascertain the cause, my conviction being, either that the species had at some time or other been crossed by another of different colours, and that nature, as sooner or later she always will do, was making an effort to separate them; or that the original colour of the worm had in reality been dark, and an effort was being made to revert from a sickly condition to the original healthy starting-point. Acting on this idea, I at once determined to assist Nature by giving her fair play, and, consequently, picked out all the dark-coloured worms and reared them separately, allowing the moths to couple only inter se, and the same course was pursued with the white worms. In the following spring the one batch of eggs produced nearly all dark-brindled worms, while the other produced white ones, sparingly interspersed as before with an occasional dark one; these latter were removed into the dark batch, which was at the _ same time weeded of its pale worms. In the third year the worms were still darker than before, and were always larger and more vigorous than the pale ones, giving likewise larger and better stuffed cocoons, M 2 150 Captain T. Hutton on the Unfortunately, just as the eggs of the third year had been de- posited and collected, a violent and unexpected gale of wind sud- denly upset the whole and irretrievably scattered them abroad. I had, however, seen such good reason for hoping that I might eventually by this method succeed in restoring the constitution of the worm, that I commenced de novo, and went over the same ground again. The eggs with which my experiment was recommenced, were procured in the spring of 1862 from Mr. Cope of Umritsir, in the Punjab, who assured me that they had just arrived direct from Cashmere, although, from their appearance, I strongly suspect they owed “their birth, parentage and education,” to the Punjab, and had been sent by mistake. But however this may be, on their arrival at Mussooree, I submitted them to the microscope, which at once proclaimed them to be ill-formed, discoloured and diseased, This Mr. Cope denied; nevertheless it was a fact, and as the worms proceeded towards maturity, various phases of disease became apparent, and I can only account for the denial of its existence by Mr. Cope and some cultivators in Bengal, by sup- posing that they do not know a disease even when they see it. The worst form attacked the worms just previous to their spin- ning the cocoons, and gave them the appearance of having been sprinkled with ink from a pen. This is, I believe, what the French term being ‘“ peppered,” or “vers poivrés ;” a most ex- pressive and appropriate term. Nevertheless the cocoons were formed, though, as might be expected, they were thin, papery and greatly deficient in silk; as cocoons, indeed, they were perfect trash, but, as I had a point to ascertain in respect to the silk, I despatched them to Mr. Turnbull of Ganthal, an experienced and skilful superintendent of silk filatures, ever willing to oblige, and who had likewise reeled for Mr. Cope of Umritsir, and Colonel Clark of Oudh; the result was, that my worthless cocoons yielded a silk not one whit inferior in quality to that produced by the inordinately-belauded cocoons of the above-mentioned gentleman; and, indeed, although in epistolé Mr. Cope pronounced Colonel Clark’s cocoons to be * the finest he had seen in India,” it was declared by Mr. Turnbull, who reeled them, that they had deteriorated 56 per cent. below the Cashmere standard furnished by Mr. Cope himself, and as that standard is itself about 50 per cent. below that of France and Italy, we may safely put down the best Indian cocoons of the true Bombyx Mori as being 75 per cent. worse than they ought to Restoration of the Silkworm. 151 be; and yet, in spite of common sense and twenty-five years’ experience, | am modestly required to believe that the worm is not diseased! What then, in such case, is the meaning of the panic in France and Italy ? It is to be remembered, however, that all my sickly worms were of the white variety, and that the few dark worms picked out from them escaped disease altogether, although reared in the same manner, in the same room, in the same temperature, on the same quality of food, and in close contiguity to the others. These dark ones in due time spun cocoons and produced moths, which, coupling inter se, deposited a fair stock of eggs, with which the experiment was again carried on in the spring of 1863. I may here observe that it is a well-known fact that the more numerous are these dark-coloured worms in any brood, the healthier is it considered to be, and vice versd. Now the eggs furnished by Mr. Cope in the spring of 1862 produced very few dark worms, while the eggs from dark worms descended from them produced in 1863 an undue number of white worms, which had to be weeded out, and proving at the same time the extreme weakness of constitution of the stock upon which I was experimenting. Again, another proof of disease is found in the fact that in the spring of 1862, the eggs received from Urmitsir were all loose and detached: this is characteristic of the species whether in India or in Europe, and proceeds from weakness in the glands attached to the ovipositor, and which do not, in consequence, secrete the gum necessary to attach the egg. A few will of course always be found to adhere at first, but so slightly that the least touch causes them to fall. In the spring of 1863 the eggs obtained in the previous year from the dark stock began to hatch on the 16th of March, and no sign of disease was apparent among them until the moths came forth from the cocoons, when many of these still showed defect in the malformation and dark spotting of the wings. As compared, however, with the previous year there was decided improvement ; there were still too many white worms in the brood, but they did not show any symptoms of disease and none died; they attained to a larger size by a quarter of an inch, increasing from. three to three and a quarter inches in length; they produced, in conse- quence, larger cocoons, though still deficient in silk, and the moths, although still showing the presence of disease, laid good sized eggs, great numbers of which adhered firmly to the paper upon which they were deposited, and indeed one sheet of paper 152 Captain T. Hutton on the was thickly covered with them, a thing which, although I have paid attention to this subject for the last twenty-five years, I never witnessed before, nor even heard of it. The eggs of other species will adhere, but to find those of the Bombyx Mori doing so is truly a novelty which betokens decided progress towards a healthier condition. There was likewise another indication of returning strength to be seen in the fact that, while ordinarily the male moths are so sluggish as to make no attempt to fly, many of those produced from my black stock left the trays and flew off to seek the females in a distant part of the room. This is one of the marked cha- racteristics of the wild moth of Bombyx Huttoni, which flies off from tree to tree for long distances when ‘on amorous thoughts intent.” But still more extraordinary appears the fact that some of the eggs of B. Mori of the spring crop of 1863 began to hatch again for a second crop on the 7th of August of the same year; these were all from the dark stock, and the circumstance, in itself per- fectly novel, arises, I am inclined to think, from an accession of strength acquired by reversion to a state approaching more nearly to the original constitution. The hatching continued throughout August, and occasionally even tothe 23rd of September, when, fearing that my supply of leaves might fail, the eggs were removed to a temperature below 70° Fahrenheit in order to check the hatching. The worms now hatched continued to grow and thrive, and spun good cocoons superior in size to those of the spring crop, the worms attaining to 3,4, inches in length, In due time the moths appeared and were fully twice as large as those of spring, de- positing large well-formed eggs. In the beginning of December, to my dismay, more worms were hatched from the spring batch, and continued to come forth throughout the month at the rate of 40 or 50 daily in a temperature of 53° Fahrenheit, when, having no more leaves upon the trees, I was compelled to place the re- maining eggs out in the open air at night in order that the sharp hoar frosts might effectually put a stop to any further hatching. All these worms were of the dark kind, and no white ones now appeared among them as in the spring; indeed from the white stock only three worms were produced and these came to nothing. This circumstance, so thoroughly unusual with Bombyx Mori, I attribute entirely to an accession of health and strength in the black worms, which are evidently now in a transition state, which may account in some measure for their hatching out of season, so Restoration of the Silkworm. 153 irregularly and in such a low temperature. This, however, must close the experiment for 1863, and I must hope for some decided results in the spring of 1864 from the eggs deposited in October, 1863. In the meantime then I will return to the consideration of what the worm ought in reality to be. The Dark Worm is the Natural Colour. That the dark colour is the natural one is shown in some measure by the strong similarity, evinced in the disposition and arrangement of the markings, to the wild races of India; while the moth also, instead of remaining so purely white in wings and body, assumes a dark ashy or smoky hue on the body of the males, which is likewise diffused over a great portion of the wings, as in Bombya Huttoni. Here, then, I think I have already given in the above account strong proofs that the original colour of the worm was dark, and that the pale sickly hue which it has long since assumed is entirely owing to debilitated constitution. Nor is there here much room for wonder when we reflect how often among our other domestic stock the original colour fades away, to give place to pie-bald, and finally to white. Need I do more than call attention to our domesticated rabbits, our pigeons, domestic fowls, turkeys, Guinea fowls, ducks and geese, in proof that the more the white colour prevails the further do the species recede from their natural characteristics, and the weaker becomes the constitution. Even our cage birds, as every bird-fancier well knows, exhibit this same tendency to lose their original colours, and become paler and paler, until many eventually turn altogether white. On this subject, for the purpose of strengthening my argument, I feel that I cannot do better than quote a passage from General Daumas’ very able work on ‘ The Horses of the Sahara,” that writer’s views being so thoroughly in accordance with my own. “Tt is abundantly apparent,” says the General, ‘* that legendary traditions and experience are in perfect harmony in according a decided superiority to coats of deep and decided hues. Coats of a light pale colour are held in no esteem whatever. The horse’s coat, therefore, must be an index to his character. The long ex- perience of Mahomed the prophet and of Moussa the conqueror must have placed them in a position to speak with full knowledge of the subject, and their opinion, confirmed by that of all the Arabs, the best horsemen in the world and the most interested in 154 Captain T. Hutton on the studying the animal, upon whom indeed depends their honour and their life, is certainly entitled to be regarded with some respect. It is beyond all question that the Kouwmmite—red mingled with black, chestnut or bay—is preferred by the Arabs to all others. If I might be allowed to quote my own personal experience, I should have no hesitation in saying that, if there be any prejudice in the matter, I share it with them. Besides, must it necessarily be a prejudice because it may seem to be one? No one will deny that all the individuals of the same species are, in their wild state, identical in colour and endowed with common instinctive qualities in- herent in the race. ‘These colours and these qualities undergo no alteration or admixture except in a state of servitude and under its influences, so that if any of these individuals by a return to their natural condition, more easily proved than explained, happen to recover the colour of their first ancestors, they mill be equally distin- guished by more broadly defined natural qualities. ‘The canine race may be taken as an ilJustration. Whence it follows that a certain number of domesticated individuals being given, their coats alike and with dominant qualities, it may be fairly concluded that this coat and these qualities were those of the race in its wild state. In the case then of the Arab horse, if it be true that those whose coat is red shaded with black are endowed with superior speed, are we not justified in inferring that such was the uniform colour, such the natural qualities, of the sires of the race? 1 submit with all humility these observations to men of science. ** Abd-el-Kader assures us, moreover, that it is ascertained by the Arabs that horses change colour according to the soil on which they are bred. Is it not possible, in fact, that wader an atmosphere more or less light, of water more or less fresh, of a nurture more or less rich according as the soil on which it is raised is more or less wmpregnated with certain elements, the skin of the horse may be sensibly affected? Every one knows that with any coat the colour changes in tone and shade according to the locality where the animal lives, the state of its health, the quality of the water it drinks, and of the food it eats, and the care that is bestowed upon it. ‘There is, perhaps, in all this a lesson in natural history not to be de- spised, for if the circumstances in which a horse lives act upon his skin, they must inevitably act also in the long run upon his form and qualities.” * Truly does the author here remark, that there is “in all this a Jesson in natural history not to be despised,” though, doubtless, he * «The Horses of the Sahara,” by Gen. Daumas, p. 20. English Trans- lation. Restoration of the Silkworm. 155 little thought how applicable were his observations to the actual condition of an insect of such value and importance to his own countrymen as the Bombyx Mori. I have italicised those passages to which I wish more particularly to draw the reader’s attention, and shall now proceed to show their applicability to my present subject. That the long-continued domestication of the silkworm has tended greatly to deteriorate its original constitution, the numerous diseases to which it is now subject, in every country where cultivated, furnish ample proof. That imperfect ven- tilation of the rearing houses produces a vitiated and impure atmosphere, highly injurious to health; that the nourishment derived from the mulberry leaves will be more or less good according to the condition of the tree from which they are gathered ; and that the tree itself will be influenced by the nature of the soi] and the temperature of the climate in which it grows, are facts of which every observant cultivator is well aware. As with the horse, then, so with the silkworm; an unbealthy state of the atmosphere in which it is reared, together with an in- sufficiently nutritious diet, combined with other disadvantages which are incidental to a state of servility or domestication, must sooner or later exercise a very marked effect upon the general health of the animals, and the constitution, being once impaired, will necessarily, by affecting the animal functions generally, not only act upon the skin and colour, but engender debility and disease. It is under such circumstances, and when the species threatens to become extinct, that nature’s great Guide and Ruler, acting for the creature’s good, and with a view to the preservation of the species, invariably makes efforts to restore it to its original characteristics, and these symptoms of reversion, if seized and followed up by judicious efforts on the part of man, may enable him, perchance, eventually to cast out disease, and restore the species to its natural ‘colours and original strength of con- stitution. Herein consists the entire secret of my experiments with the Bombyx Mori. Seeing that a very remarkable difference in colour sometimes occurred, and being fully aware of the truth of General Daumas’ remark, that “the colours and the qualities undergo no alteration or admixture except in a state of servitude, and under its influences,” I determined to ascertain whether the dark colour of some worms was or was not occasioned by an effort on the part of nature to revert to the original point at which 156 Captain T. Hutton on the domestication had commenced, and that it actually is such is proved, not only by the colours remaining permanent in the black race, which they do not in the white race, but by the acquisition of qualities which originally belonged to the species and which the pale-coloured worms do not exhibit. Thus, as the General truly observes, ‘‘ the recovery of the colour of their first ancestors has caused them to be distinguished by more broadly defined natural qualities.” Still further, we gather from the observations of M. Boitard, that “the black worm, which is so often met with in the north of France, is absolutely unknown in Italy; and yet the eggs, which in France will produce them, are often purchased in Italy.” Here it is plain, if my views are correct, that climate tells upon the constitution of the insect even in Europe, and that in Italy, where the temperature is bigh, the black worm is unknown, simply because the heat of the climate, combined, perhaps, with too high a temperature in the houses, enervates the worm and causes it to depart further from its original type than it does in France, where the climate is colder and more favourable to the general health of the insect. Again, the same writer informs us, that ‘in Lombardy the worm which produces the white silk will constantly furnish nine white coccons to one yellow one, although in France, no matter how much care may have been bestowed upon the worm, the yellow cocoons will always far out-number the white ones.’ Now I have long entertained the idea, that the production of white cocoons is (except in cases where that colour is permanent in all climates) a strong sign of degeneracy, proceeding from weakness of constitution, the rather that such white cocoons are always more abundant where the temperature is high, than in more temperate climates. Hence in Italy the worms, which in that high temperature will constantly produce an excess of white, will in a more favourable situation and circumstances produce an excess of yellow, cocoons.. Thus, the Loro-pooloo of Bengal (B. textor, nov.), which there and in China, as a rule, produces white cocoons, when reared in the colder climate of Mussooree yields almost all yellow cocoons; while to find a white cocoon among the worms of Cashmere (B. Mori) is altogether the ex- ception. Hence I come to the conclusion, that the whiteness of the worm and the white cocoons are both indications of failing con- stitution, evidencing the existence of a higher temperature and of a more thoroughly artificial treatment than are conducive to the Restoration of the Silkworm. 157 health of the insect. Were the white or the yellow colour to remain permanent in all climates and temperatures, the fact might reasonably be regarded as a specific character, but where, as in the above observations, we perceive these colours to be dependent upon temperature, we are compelled to regard the change as entirely dependent upon the state of health. Thus heat, by causing debility, undermines the constitution, and gradually changes the natural colours, of both the insect and the silk secreted by it, into a sickly white, while a restoration to a cooler climate will, under proper management, restore the colours to their natural shade, by imparting vigour to the droop- ing insect. Deterioration proved. Those who possess any real knowledge of the subject under discussion will, [ am fully aware, require no further proof of the worm’s deterioration than has already been furnished above ; yet as there are not wanting some pretended savans, whose private interests prompt them to conceal as much as possible the maladies under which all our worms are labouring, 1 shall proceed yet further to show, even from their own arguments, how very little they really know upon the subject. Common sense will at once point out that a worm imported from the northern provinces of China will not long maintain its vigour in any part of the hot lowland provinces of India, and indeed this is fully shown by one cultivator proposing to preserve the eggs of Bombyx Mori by sending them from the Punjab to the mountain station of Durrumsala, as well as by the fact that Jaffer Ali of Mooltan invariably preserves his in a cool under- ground chamber or tykhana. It is evident from this, that even the heat of the Punjab is far greater than the egg can bear, and if it be inimical and destructive to the egg, it will undoubtedly be equally so to the insect in every other stage. The loss annually sustained by the cultivator Jaffer Ali, even when the eggs are kept in the dykhana, is said to be ‘from a fourth to a third,” the heat (even under ground !) drying up the eggs without hatching the worms!* If this can be called successful cultivation then no one need despair ! From this admission it is clear that what actual disease effects in France, where “ /a muscardine” is said annually to destroy more than one-fourth of the worms, is effected by heat, even in an * Powlett’s Report in Proceedings Agricult. Soc. of India, 9th July, 1862. 158 Captain T, Hutton on the underground cellar, in the Punjab; how then, in such a climate, can really good results be expected, since the same writer, while trumpeting forth the wonders performed in the Punjab, very naively winds up his laudations with the assurance that ‘out of taikhanahs the eggs cannot be preserved in the plains at all.” As to his assertion that those eggs ‘‘that survive the heat are not injured, but produce as healthy and fine worms as if the eggs had been kept in a cool climate,” it actually amounts to nothing, unless at the same time we can feel assured that the writer is well acquainted with what the worms ought to be, and can prove that they are as large and produce the same quantity of silk as those of colder climates; and that such is not the case is proved by the testimony of Mr. C. J. Turnbull, who states that Umritsir-reared cocoons are 56 per cent. below the Cashmere standard! Indeed this gentleman, who is undoubtedly a good authority, pronounces the cocoons of Oudh and of Umritsir to be about equal, so that they had degenerated in those localities in one season 56 per cent. below the standard of Cashmere as furnished by Mr. Cope himself a couple of years before ! Again, cocoons raised at Lucknow in Oudh by Dr. Bonavia required 5,200 to the pound of silk ; at Candahar in 1840 the Afghans reckoned about 4,500 to the pound of silk; while in France, previous to the late epidemic, 2,500 cocoons were, on the testimony of Mr. Bashford,* equal to a pound of silk. Here, then, we have positive evidence that the climate of the Punjab and other parts of the plains of India is injurious to the health and general well-being of the insect. Now it is also the opinion of Mr. Turnbull that the Candahar and Cashmere yield of silk is pretty nearly on a par; and as from the above statistics the Oudh and Punjab cocoons are at least 50 to 56 per cent. below the Cashmere standard, which is itself con- siderably below that of France, we may safely say that the cocoons of the Indian-bred Bombyx Mori are little short of 75 per cent. below what they ought to be. What benefit then, I would ask, is likely to ensue from the introduction into Italy of the eggs lately purchased in Cashmere by Dr. Carlo Orio? The worms reared from those eggs will no doubt be improved by the change of climate and more judicious treatment, but they will add nothing to the health and vigour of the European stock ! It has been justly remarked that “there are few individuals * Journal Hort. Soc, of India, vol. ix. part 3, p. 261. Restoration of the Silkworm. 159 who have not watched the interesting changes which take place in the larvae of the Bombyx Mori, or common silkworm, from the point of its exit from the egg until it has reached its full butterfly existence ; and many there are who have been sadly disappointed at the mortality which comes over a brood of silkworms in a single night from some cause or causes unknown, and conse- quently irremediable. Such epidemics are continually occurring in China as well as Europe, and constitute one of the greatest obstacles to the introduction of the culture of the silkworm into England. What occasions this sudden decimation of these insects has never been determined, but has long led to a wish, on the part of those interested, that a more hardy breed of silk-producing worms could be introduced into Europe, even though the produce was coarser and of a worse colour than the ordinary mulberry silk.”* Here, then, is a further and very recent testimony to the diseased state of the worm. Good Quality of the Silk no Proof of general Health. I shall doubtless be told that “the proof of the pudding is in the eating,” and that as silk of the best quality and worth twenty- five shillings per pound has been produced in the Punjab, the worm cannot possibly be diseased or have lost its constitution. To this I reply, that in order to test “the pudding” properly and fairly, we require a judge possessed of some knowledge of what a pudding ought to be. In the introductory remarks to my “‘ Monograph on the Genus Attacus,” | have shown, after Kirby and Spence and other autho- rities, that the gum from the reservoirs being conveyed to the mouth by the constriction of certain muscles, passes through two small orifices in the lip, and the two fibres thus formed, being taken up and twisted together by the hook-like processes in the mouth appointed to that office, become one fibre of silk on coming into contact with the cold external air. Now these two orifices in the lip are expressly appointed to the purpose of regulating the thick- ness of the silken fibre with which the cocoons are formed; they are a provision of Nature which determines the thickness of the silken thread, and that thickness, in worms of equal size, will be constantly uniform, so that a large and healthy worm will yield a thicker fibre than a smaller and degenerated worm. As long as the reservoirs contain gum, the thickness of the silk will be the same whether the worm is diseased or not, provided * Journal Soc. Arts, Nov. 6th, 1863, p. 776, 160 Captain T. Hutton on the always that the worms are of equal size; and that simply owing to the regulating organ above mentioned. The quality of the silk comprises thickness of fibre, tenacity and elasticity, and where the secreting glands are not affected by disease, this quality, from worms equally well fed, will be the same even where the general health of the one is far inferior to the other; indeed it is the quantity, rather than the quality, of the silk that is affected by the maladies under which the worms are now labouring. The cocoons reared in Oudh by Colonel Clark, and pronounced by Mr. Cope, in epistold, to be ‘the finest he had seen in India,” produced, on being reeled, a silk of precisely the same quality as that produced at Umritsir, and by my Mussooree cocoons reared from Mr. Cope’s supply of diseased eggs in 1862, and which, as cocoons, were absolutely worthless, there being little or no silk inthem. Dr. Bonavia’s cocoons, raised in Oudh in 1863, from seed furnished by Mr. Cope, yielded a silk in no respect inferior to the above, although the pound of silk requiring 5,200 cocoons to produce it proved how terribly deficient was the quantity of gum secreted. In cases where the glands are affected by disease, or where the leaf has not contained a proper proportion of silk-yielding matter, no silk at all will be secreted, and the worm will either die as such, or become a pupa without spinning. Many cases of this kind occur in all the broods, whether monthly or annual. To talk, as some do, of coarse leaves producing a coarse silk, and therefore recommending the use of such as are thin and tender, is at once to prove non-acquaintance with the anatomy of the insect and ignorance of the whole art of nourishing the worm, since, as already pointed out, the thickness of the silk fibre is regulated by Nature, and a thin fibre produced by a worm, which, like B. Mori, ought to yield one of a certain thickness, is a positive proof of the presence of disease, inasmuch as it indicates the decreasing size of the orifices, consequent on the deterioration and degeneracy of the worm. ‘The orifices in the lip being of a regulated size, no extra-natural coarseness of fibre can be pro- duced, and no coarseness of leaf could ever make the fibre thicker than Nature intended it to be, or than those orifices were capable of admitting, simply because it is a well-ascertained fact that “a camel cannot pass through the eye of a needle.” Remarks on “ the Diet of Worms.” _ Having been frequently applied to from different quarters for information as to the best kind of mulberry leaf on which to rear the silkworm, it may be as well perhaps to give the result of my Restoration of the Silkworm. 161 own experience, and leave each inquirer to please himself as to the species he may find it most convenient and most suitable to adopt. The question then is, ‘ what species of mulberry tree is best adapted for the nourishment of the silkworm, and for the pro- duction of good silk ?” Were all climates alike the question might be easily answered, but in its present form it is too vague and general; besides which, thus put, it assuredly implies a belief that we have only one species of silkworm under cultivation, and that whether monthly or annual, all come under the head of Bombyx Mort. This, however, is not the case, the name of B. Mort belonging of right to the worm known in India as the Cashmere worm, which is an annual, and is cultivated in Afghanistan, Bokhara, Persia, Syria, Italy, France and other European countries. It was originally brought from the northern provinces of China, where the country is mountainous, and the climate, especially in winter, very severeand cold. There is also another worm cultivated as an annual in Bengal under the native name of Loro-pooloo, which means “ large cocoon,” it being the largest species of Bombyx under cultivation in Bengal. As compared with the cocoon of the Cashmere worm, however, it is very much smaller, of a different form and texture, and yielding generally a pure white silk, although, as already observed, in the colder temperature of Mussooree the yellow cocoons are at least quite as numerous as the white. This likewise is from China, and from its being an annual is. supposed, with good reason, to be a native of the northern parts of that country. This species I have named Bombyx textor, as it is totally distinct from the Cashmere worm. Three other species domesticated in Bengal are respectively termed the Madrassee or Nistry,—the Dasee,—and the small Chinese monthly worm; these three are termed monthly worms because they yield from six to eight crops during the year. These I have respectively named Lombyx Creesi, B. fortunatus and B. Sinensis, while from the fact of their yielding several crops a year I am inclined to regard them as belonging to the warmer and more southern parts of China, the number of broods indicating a climate in which food is abundant throughout the year, while the annuals on the contrary, as every naturalist is aware, indicate a far more temperate climate. Besides these there is said to be another species cultivated in Arracan which yields a silk superior to that of the Bengal worms, but as I have been hitherto unable to procure it for examination, 162 Captain T. Hutton on the I can do no more than indicate its existence and name it pro- visionally as Bombyx Arracanensis. Seeing, then, that this diversity exists among the worms, it is but reasonable to infer that in their native countries and in a state of nature, they did not all feed upon the same species of mulberry leaf, but that the annuals, like the wild Bombyx Huttoni of the Western Himalaya, were originally restricted to the trees indi- genous to the cold mountainous regions of the north of China, while the monthly worms were in like manner confined to species adapted to the greater heats of the southern lowland provinces. The question, then, as to which is the tree best adapted, in India or elsewhere, for the production of good silk, although apparently a very simple one, is in reality not easily answered, since much must depend upon the species of worm under cultivation, as well as upon the climate itself, and the difficulty is enhanced by the fact that every one who, possessed of much zeal but little know- ledge of the subject, essays to rear silkworms, appears to think it necessary to extol some particular species of mulberry, and to pronounce it, for the time, the very ne plus ultra of silkworm diet. One while it is the white-fruited mulberry only that can enable the insect to elaborate good silk, and anon, for some inexplicable whim, the white is discarded and another tree adopted in its stead. The purple-fruited species are unhesitatingly denounced, and to be * condemned without benefit of clergy.”* And yet the white mulberry is found to be nothing more than an Albino variety of the purple-fruited tree. Count Dandolo long since pointed this out ; and I have myself sown the seed of the dark purple mulberry, known to the natives as the “Szah Toot,” and found that several of the young plants produced therefrom eventually bore white fruit only, the shape and flavour being entirely changed, and in some respects the leaf also, To my surprise, moreover, three young trees, said to be from Cashmere, and which for the past three years had borne white fruit alone, were this season (1863) covered with purple fruit. The difference in the quality of silk reared respectively upon these two kinds—which are thus in reality not two, but one and the same—must be to a very great extent purely imaginary, and I will venture to assert that if two skeins of silk thus grown, that is to say, the one from the purple and the other from the white- fruited tree, were placed before any cultivator in India, he would not be able to distinguish between them. * Proc. Hort. Soc. of India, 10th August, 1859, vol. xi. part 1, p. 64. Restoration of the Silkworm. 163 Of the Morus alba, Count Dandolo remarks,—‘ This species comprises the common wild mulberry, which has four varieties in the fruit—two have white berries, one red and the other black.” Here, then, the merest tyro may perceive that the red berry merely forms the connecting link between the black and the white fruit, and consequently that there can be but little, if any, differ- ence in the quality of the leaf; indeed, all that the Count ventures to observe on the subject is, that ‘ the leaf of the black mulberry, hard, harsh and tough, which is given to the silkworms in some of the warmer climates of Europe, in Spain, in Sicily, in Calabria and in some parts of Greece, &c., produces abundant silk, the thread of which is very strong, but coarse. The white mulberry- leaf of the tree planted in high lands exposed to cold dry winds and in light soil produces generally a large quantity of strong silk of the purest and finest quality.” Now, if by the term ‘ coarse,” as here applied to the silk raised from the black mulberry, is meant thick as to fibre, the difference is seemingly of little importance, and would be overcome, I should imagine, in the reeling by assigning fewer fibres to the thread ; while that the produce of the white mulberry is not uniformly the same or to be depended upon is shown in its being only “ generally,” and not always, of the finest quality ; and moreover “the finest quality” does not necessarily imply thinness of fibre, but may refer to other qualities, such as evenness, tenacity and elasticity ; while, with regard to the degree of coarseness above alluded to, it must be borne in mind that it could not possibly be coarser than nature intended it to be, because the regulating orifices in the lip would prevent it. Besides which it is extremely questionable whether “ high lands exposed to cold dry winds” and with a “light soil’’ are suitable to the mulberry tree, especially in such high latitudes ; and if not, then the worms fed upon the leaves of such trees would be naturally less healthy and of smaller size than those reared under more favourable circumstances, and, consequently, the worm and the labial orifices being smaller, the silk would of necessity be finer. This, however, is not an argument in favour of the white mulberry, but against the locality in which it is grown. Seeing then that the silk cannot be coarser than nature intended it to be, while it may be much finer, the argument tends altogether to prove that great fineness of fibre is a consequence of decreasing size in the worm, produced by increasing debility of constitution. M. Boitard, a French writer on the cultivation of silk and of the mulberry tree, informs us that the white mulberry is often tinged with red, a statement which upholds and confirms my VOL. II, THIRD SERIES, PART I1.—AuGuST, 1864. N 164 =- Captain T. Hutton on the remark that the red holds an intermediate place between the black and the white fruit. In 1858 the white mulberry appears in some quarters to have fallen in estimation, and the Morus multicaulis was likewise con- demned, as it was said, ‘‘ because it produces so few leaves, though they are larger, and partly because those few are too soft and milky for the worm, yielding a weak fibre.’’* This statement, however, unfortunately proved to be an egre- gious blunder, the tree thus denounced being in reality not the Morus multicaulis, which, as the specific name points out, instead of having few leaves of large size, has a multitude of branches thickly covered with a moderate-sized leaf. The large-leaved tree is now named Morus cucullata, from the leaf taking the form of a skull cap, and strange to say, although pronounced to be worthless when supposed to be MM. multicaulis, was subsequently, by the same authority, and under the equally erroneous name of Morus Sinensis, extensively cultivated as a first-rate silkworm diet. Whatever may be the value of M. multicaulis and M. cucullata in their own native climates, they do not appear to have given much satisfaction elsewhere, and certainly in a cold northern climate they can scarcely be expected to do so; at Mussooree, I regard them both as trash, and although in Oudh, Dr. Bonavia found that B. Mort and B. Sinensis both ate them readily enough, yet in the later stages of the worm a leaf of greater substance was required. In such case I would recommend the coarser leaf from the very beginning, for if the young worm lacks sufficient nourishment in the two first stages of its growth, it will be next to impossible, by any amount of subsequent good feeding, to recover the ground thus lost. It is, I am convinced, precisely because in the early stages the worms have been fed upon chopped and thin watery leaves, that the constitution has been at length brought to the very extreme of weakness. Starvation in childhood is surely not the best method of eventually producing either a strong healthy man, or any other animal ! The climate, the tree, and the species of silkworm to be reared should all, as much as possible, be adapted to each other; whereas under the present system the cultivator appears to think that climate, food and the constitution of the insect are all mere secondary considerations to be set at naught, and dis- * Journ. Hort. Soc. of India, vol.*. part 2, p. 182. Restoration of the Silkworm, 165 regarded with impunity, and then wonders, because he has steadily pursued certain stereotyped rules, at the failure of his speculation, Lest, then, this blind laudation of certain species should lead to mischievous results and disappointment among those who are desirous of entering into the speculation, I shall here beg leave to call the attention of the sericulturist to the well-known fact, that ** what is one man’s meat is another man’s poison,” and remind him that the diet which is admirably adapted to keep up animal heat and to nourish an individual in the vicinity of the North Pole, will be found both unsuitable and highly injurious to health in lower and warmer latitudes. We have but to cast a glance around us in order to perceive that each nation, according to its climate, differs somewhat from another in the matter of food; those of the warmer parts of the world being more frugal and less gross in their diet than those of the colder regions, Is it not proverbial, that where a Frenchman, content with thin wines and a few field herbs wherewith to make a salad, would thrive, an Englishman, addicted, as he is, to strong ale, with an unlimited allowance of beef and bacon, would starve outright?) The raw seal blubber, so palatable to the Esquimaux, would be wholly unsuited to the more temperate countries of Europe, and, as a rule, we find that the diet is the simplest in the hottest regions, and becomes gradually more gross as we approach the north, where the cold requires the use of more solid and stimulating food to promote and keep up the animal heat of the body. Something of the same kind is assuredly perceptible also among the feral tribes; the bears, for instance, being far more carnivorous in high latitudes than near the tropics, where fruits, vegetables and insects constitute the animal’s food; but confining my remarks for the present to the larvee of the Bombycide or silkspinners, we find that nature has ordained that the species in different latitudes shall feed upon different trees. It may be said that this arises from the fact that the same trees are not found in these different localities, and consequently that the insects are compelled to seek another food, or to starve; this, however, does not appear to disclose the true philosophy of the question, and it certainly does not prove that such food in southern regions is equally stimulating with that of northern climes, but rather that instinct teaches the insect to accommodate itself to the provisions provided for it, precisely as a traveller to the northern regions makes use of pemmican, which he discards N2 166 Captain T. Hutton on the on returning home. There are indeed not wanting proofs that even where the food of one latitude exists in another, the insect will refuse to eat it, as if aware that it is no longer suitable to its wants! The truth seems to be this, that where a tree and an insect have existed together in, perhaps, a southern latitude, and the tree ceases to grow in some more northern locality where the insect is still found, it is because the tree in the colder locality would no longer be able to furnish a sufficiently stimulating diet, and is, therefore, replaced by one more suitable to the wants of the insect. And this after all is simply one of those wise pro- visions of nature whereby her productions and the conditions under which they exist are mutually adapted to each other. As a proof of this, we find that although the larve of the beautiful Aliacus Atlas are known in Kumaon to feed freely and principally upon the leaves of the yellow-flowering barberry (Berberis Asiatica?), called at Mussooree Russote, yet with us, where the plant is equally common, I have never yet succeeded in inducing the worm to touch it, nor have I ever found either the larvee or the cocoons upon this shrub. And yet out of forty- six cocoons now before me from Kumaon no fewer than forty- three have been spun among the leaves of B. Asiatica! Surely this looks like a case in point; besides which it is an unques- tionable fact that among the mulberry trees which are known to be true species, and not mere varieties, the leaves of those from the north possess far greater thickness, consistency and nourish- ment than those from the tropics or warm lowland provinces. Take for example the leaves of Morus multicaulis and of M. cucullata, as compared with those of M/. Sinensis, M. nigra ?, and the wild indigenous trees of the North Western Himalaya. At Pondicherry, according to information derived from my obliging correspondent M. Perrottet, the Actias Selene is entirely restricted to the Odina Wodier of Roxburgh, while at Mussooree it is polyphagous, feeding on Coriaria Nipalensis, Carpinus bimana, Andromeda ovalifolia, Cedrela paniculata, the common walnut, Cerasus puddum, or wild cherry, Pyrus variolosa, and several others. Again, Altacus Cynthia, which in China is nourished on the leaves of Ailanthus glandulosa, feeds in Cachar upon a tree called “ Lood,” and at Mussooree on Coriaria Nipa- lensis, Xanthoxylon* hostile and some others; and so on, indeed, throughout the family. * In previous papers this word has invariably appeared as Xunthophyllum, which is an error. Restoration of the Silkworm. 167 The wild indigenous mulberry of Mussooree, with thick coarse leaves full of milky juice, is often so thickly covered with the larvee of Bombyx [Huttoni, that by the beginning of May there is not a single leaf upon the tree wherein the worm can spin its cocoon; yet although the thinner-leaved cultivated mulberry may abound in the immediate neighbourhood, it never by any chance experiences the same treatment; so that taking the hint from nature, I am inclined to recommend for the Bombyx Mori, when cultivated in the upper provinces, and more especially in the hills, such leaves as those furnished by M. nigra?, M. Stnensis, Bédana or seedless long white mulberry, and others of the thick rough-leaved kinds. At the same time it is highly probable that certain species, which are wholly unadapted to a cold hill climate and the action of severe frost, may thrive well in the lowland provinces of India, where they will likewise be suitable to the worms of warm localities, such as I consider the Bengal monthly worms to be. But to extol in general terms one species above another, and endeavour, on wholly insufficient and often purely theoretical data, to persuade people that it is the best adapted for the nourishment of the silkworm,—the species of worm, moreover, not being specified,—is, in my opinion, the surest way of propagating pure sophistry and of insuring the failure of speculations in other districts, which, from the nature of their climates, require both a different diet and a different mode of treatment. ‘There is, moreover, yet another point to be considered, for although certain trees, such as M. multicaulis and M. cucullata, may thrive well enough in the Punjab and the Gangetic provinces, yet it is more than doubtful whether the Cashmere worm will thrive upon them; for while the trees delight in and are adapted to a warm lowland temperature, the insect, whose cultivation is becoming fashionable in the upper provinces, is from the northern mountainous tracts of China, situated between 32° and 34° of north latitude, whereas in our Himalayan regions frost and snow are the accompaniments of winter. The cultivator should re- member that a northern insect requires a northern tree, and the northern tree requires a northern climate, and that he himself requires a certain amount of knowledge and the exercise of common sense. Trees producing leaves of extreme thinness, like those of M. multicaulis and M. cucullata, are far from desirable on account of their containing but little nourishment, and necessitating a larger 168 Captain T. Hutton on the and more frequent supply. A good and healthy leaf should con- tain the four ingredients of fibre, water, saccharine and resinous matter; the two first go directly to the nourishment and growth of the worm, while from the two latter is secreted the supply of gum which eventually furnishes the silk. Where the two former only are found, or where they are greatly in excess, as is some- times the case, the worm will grow and attain to a goodly size, but will produce little, or perhaps no, silk. In breaking off a good healthy leaf, a drop or two of thick milky viscous juice should exude from the stalk, and in this resides the silk-producing matter; the Morus Sinensis and all the thick-leaved trees possess this in far greater quantity than either 2/7. cucullata or M. multi- caulis, and indeed from the latter species, when grown in a cold climate, it is almost absent, being thin and watery. Yet after all, it has long since been laid down as an ascertained fact, that however much the quantity of silk may be dependent upon the presence of this juice, the quality is far less dependent upon the good properties of the leaf than upon the temperature in which the worms have been reared; so that where this is higher than the constitution of the insect is fitted to endure, no matter how well it may have been fed, the yield will always be inferior to that produced in a more genial temperature ; and that the Bombyx Mori of Cashmere is greatly influenced even by the heat of the Punjab, is proved beyond all contradiction by M. Perrottet’s ob- servation, in epistold, that eggs deposited there and sent to him by Mr. Cope, of Umritsir, were inferior in size, and far more irregu- lar in form, than those sent by me from Mussooree, where the climate is better adapted to the species. The fact is moreover fully established by the annual loss sustained by Jaffer Ali as above narrated, as well-as by Mr. Cope’s expressed intention of sending his Punjab-bred eggs to the hills during summer, and of importing annually fresh seed from Cashmere. The same remark is equally applicable to Oudh. That the thinness of the leaf, both in M. multicaulis and M. cu- cullata, is a very serious defect may be gathered from Count Dandolo’s remark, that “the less nutritive substance the leaf contains, the more leaves must the silkworm consume to complete its development. The result must, therefore, be that the silkworm which consumes a large quantity of leaves that are not nutritive, must be more fatigued and more liable to disease than the silkworm that eats a smaller proportion of more nutritive leaves. The same may be said of those leaves which, containing a sufficiency of nutritive matter, contain little resinous substance; in that case Restoration of the Silkworm. 169 the insects would thrive and grow, but probably would not pro- duce either a thick or strong cocoon proportionate to the weight of the silkworm, as sometimes occurs in unfavourable seasons. My experiments,” continues the Count, ‘prove in the ultimate analysis that, all things balanced, the qualities of the soil produce but a very slight difference on the quality of the leaf; that which will appear most evident is, that the principal influential cause of the fineness of the silk is the degree of temperature in which the silkworm is reared. It is neither the water nor the fibre of the Jeaf that nourishes the silkworm and renders the cocoon heavy, but the resinous and saccharine substances.” The concluding sentence, however, is scarcely to be relied on, since the worm in its growth is undoubtedly nourished by the water and the fibre of the leaf, although it is equally true that the weight and thickness of the cocoon depend upon the presence of the other substances, while it is necessary to guard against the error of endeavouring to produce too much fineness in the silk, since I have already shown that to be an indication of too high a temperature and of the consequent degeneracy of the worm. Besides which, that the soil must in some measure act upon the quality of the leaf can scarcely be doubted when we consider that it is from the soil that the tree derives its nourishment, and the changes which occur both in the shape and substance of the leaf and in the colour of the fruit can be attributed, I imagine, to nothing else. In regard to the treatment of the trees, it has been justly re- marked that they may be very seriously injured by too close plucking; it has been forgotten, however, by those who in India have laid some stress upon the fact, that the remark applies rather to the mulberry trees of Europe and other temperate climes, than to those of tropical regions; for in the former there is too short a summer to enable the tree to produce fresh leaves without an injurious effort on the part of Nature;* whereas in tropical and neighbouring climates, where the summers are warm and long, and otherwise conducive to the growth of vegetation, the dread of injury need scarcely be entertained. Nature, indeed, herself points out that such is the truth, for in the Himalaya the indi- genous mulberry trees may often be seen in the early part of May without a single leaf upon them, all having been devoured by the first or spring-brood of the larvee of Bombyx Huttoni ; and yet in * Mr. F. Moore informs me that eggs of B. Huttoni hatched in April, when there were yet no leaves! 170 Captain T. Hutton on the about three weeks afterwards, or even less, the same tree will be found to have again put on an abundant and healthy foliage ready for the second or autumnal brood of the same worm. ‘This some- times goes on year after year without the least apparent injury to the tree, and even the cultivated kinds are often stripped of every leaf and berry by the monkeys (Semnopithecus schistaceus), and yet put forth a second crop of both. What, therefore, Nature does, man may surely, in similar situations and under similar cir- cumstances, imitate with like success. Many things, indeed, in regard to the rearing of the silkworm, have passed into laws without the persons who adopt them having the slightest notion why they have done so, or even caring to reason on the subject ;—thus we have one law forbidding more than a certain degree of denudation of the foliage, which is strictly applicable to northern climates only, and necessitates the planting of an additional number of trees, Then, again, another law enjoins that no moisture must remain upon the leaf for fear of injury to the worm; and yet in a state of nature we must feel assured that the leaves are often wet with rain and dew without doing injury to the worms that feed upon them; why then are they injured when in a state of domestication? Simply because Nature always feeds her worms with the best and freshest leaves, and in that state no injury ensues, as I indeed have often proved even with domesticated worms; but if the leaves, as is too gene- rally the case, from being closely packed, brought from a distance in the heat, and kept for hours before they are given to the worms, have begun to fade and lose their natural freshness, the moisture on them, by imbibing the exhaling gasses, will act as an active poison on the worm and kill it. Again, where the temperature of the rooms can be kept down to 80° of Fahrenheit, it is obstinately asserted that the constitu- tion of the worm cannot suffer; yet such reasoners forget that in a warm climate they can only keep down the temperature by shutting up the house and excluding heat, and that in so doing they cause malaria to arise among the worms and ordure by the exclusion of every breath of that pure fresh air which is so essential to the insect’s healthy existence. Lastly, chopped leaves must likewise be compassionately given to the new-born worms, for fear the hardness of the leaf should hurt their gums, and give the tender brats the tooth-ache.* Nota * Journ. Hort. Soc. of India, vol. x. part 2, p. 182. Restoration of the Silkworm. 171 breath of wind, not a change of temperature, must pass over these tender beings, for fear the destroying angel should stretch forth his hand and ruthlessly exterminate the whole. But common sense would fain inquire,—‘Is the worm naturally of so tender a constitution that no change must be suffered to come nigh its dwelling? If so, how did the insect contrive to brave the storms, and outlive the daily changes of temperature, even from day to night, when exposed upon the trees in its own native and northern mountain climate? Nay why was such change from day to night ordained if it were to prove injurious to organic structures ?”’ I have proved, however, at Mussooree, that the worms of different species, even in their present debilitated state, are not so delicate as it has hitherto been the fashion to suppose, and have successfully reared great numbers of worms that were night and day exposed to every change of temperature, to every gale that blew, and above all to the constant moisture of the mists which were permitted to pass through the room, saturating leaves and trays, and causing the worms themselves to sparkle through the moisture deposited upon them. Yet notwithstanding this rough treatment no deaths occurred, no particular diseases showed them- selves, and the cocoons produced were pronounced by competent judges to be good and the silk of the best quality. They have likewise been successfully reared in France in the open air, and the cocoons are pronounced to be superior to those reared within the house. And yet, after all, seeing that the constitution of the insect has been completely destroyed, what wonder if it be found unable to bear up successfully against the sudden changes of temperature of a foreign climate? ‘Too great a degree of heat,—an improper system of feeding,—the exclusion of fresh air from the rooms, and, above all, the long-continued system of breeding in and in with debilitated stock, have at length reduced the worm to the condition of a leper, and have banished from its skin every trace of those colours with which Nature had originally ornamented it. Even in Europe it has been found that heat is inimical to its health, for not only in Italy is the best silk produced in the mountainous parts of Piedmont, but M. Guérin-Ménéville, in a tour made in 1858 through France and Italy, likewise declares that it is in “those elevated localities where the vine and the mulberry escaped disease, that the worm was found to enjoy the best health.” This indefatigable naturalist also notices a custom which has 172 Captain T. Hutton on the long struck me as being most objectionable, and one which has most certainly contributed in no slight measure to destroy the strength and healthiness of the worm. “ Nature,” observes M. Guérin-Ménéville, “ distinctly shows that it is her wish that the sexes should remain coupled for a certain time, and that time is generally from ten to twelve hours, and often more.” Yet, notwithstanding the truth of this remark, it has become the custom, after Count Dandolo, whose opinions are not always to be depended on, to separate the sexes at the end of five or six hours, and the unavoidable consequence is, that while half the eggs remain altogether unimpregnated and wasted, the other half will produce weakly and sickly worms. It naturally follows then, from this unnecessary interference with Nature’s mysteries, that the worms produced are pre-disposed to disease, and as this goes on year after year, and has done so for centuries past, of course the worm becomes more and more degenerated and debilitated. Surely even here a useful lesson may be learned from the pro- ceedings of the wild species, since every one who has tied out the females of any of the larger Bombycide, such as Anthereea or Attacus, must have observed that the wild male found coupled with the female in the morning, will, if unmolested, remain so until after sunset, when a voluntary separation takes place. Conclusion. That matters, as regards the silkworm, are in a very critical and unsatisfactory condition, is fully acknowledged by the French cultivators, but I very much doubt if they have adopted the best means of checking the various maladies with which the insect is beset. Quacks, doubtless, will be found in numbers ever ready to extol some secret nostrum, but the remedies hitherto applied to cure particular phases of disease are calculated to exercise but a temporary effect, and do not by any means strike boldly home and remove the causes from which the maladies arise; hence in 1861, it was feared that the yield of silk throughout all France would scarcely rise to one-half the return given in previous years. Perfectly useless is it to seek in foreign lands for a healthier and more vigorous seed, since the loss of constitution is universal, and I confidently aver that nothing short of the re-discovery of the insect in its original state of nature, or of the complete restoration of the constitution of the domesticated stock by causing the worm to revert to its pristine colour and characteristics, will ever be able to avert the doom which now appears to be impending over the whole domestic stock of Bombyces. la Restoration of the Silkworm. 173 The mode of doing this is as simple as could be wished. Nature, ever watchful over the welfare of her productions, herself points out the course to be pursued, and invites us to profit by her wise suggestions, when she gives us so broad a hint of the true state of affairs as to place before us in almost every brood of domesticated worms a few dark individuals, as if for the express purpose of attracting and fixing the naturalist’s attention, and compelling him to adopt a method of perpetuating that dark race. Let the sericulturist separate these from his general stock, and set them apart for breeding from; let him annually weed them of all pale-coloured worms, and in the course of three or four years he will be enabled to cast aside his present sickly colourless stock, and rejoice in the acquisition of a worm far healthier than ever it has been since the day when it was first im- ported from the east by the enterprising monks to whom we are indebted for its introduction into Europe. (> F750) V. Descriptions of some New Species of Butterflies found in Southern Africa. By Rovanp TRIMEN. {Read 4th July, 1864.] TuirTEEN of the following sixteen species of Rhopalocera will be figured in the forthcoming second part of my “ Catalogue of the South African Butterflies.” Ten of the species have been dis- covered by Mr. James Henry Bowker, Inspector of the Frontier Armed Mounted Police, a gentleman who has devoted his leisure for several years past to the collection and observation of the Fauna and Flora of Kaffraria, and has specially given his atten- tion to the Lepidoptera, an order in which the densely-wooded valley of the Um-Bashee appears to be particularly rich. The new species enumerated are thus distributed among the several Families, viz. :— Fieride@ 0s ce Se ee Bye | Satyride .. se oe oe Ape Lycenide .. as ee oe os 6 Hesperide .. os se We ares Family PIERIDZ, Dup. Genus Eronia, Hiibn. Eronia varia. Exp. 2 in. 10 lin.—3 in. 1 lin. $. Fore-wing white, with contiguous (at apex confluent) hind- marginal black spots; a basal orange-red suffusion nearly fills cell; hind-wing creamy-yellow with white nervures, and suffused ill-defined hind-marginal spots. Underside.—Hind-wing and edges of fore-wing rich chrome-yellow: marginal spots small, ferru- ginous grey, some wanting; basal red of fore-wing deeper; a whitish, ferruginous-grey-clouded blotch at apex of fore-wing and two similar blotches on hind-margin of hind-wing. ¢. Smaller: markings fainter; basal red almost obsolete ; hind-wing of a deeper yellow. Underside.—Of a deeper yellow ; basal suffusion orange-yellow. Hab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria. 176 Mr. Roland Trimen’s Descriptions of Family SATYRID, Sws. Genus Eresia, Dalm. Erebia Sabacus. Exp. 1 in. 3 Jin.—1 in. 8 lin, Allied to E. Hippia, Cram. Greyish-brown; fulvous patch of fore-wing large, occupying cell (at end of which it is almost divided) and covering disc; apical ocellus bipupillate with bluish, faintly yellowish-ringed ; patch of hind-wing small, enclosing two small white-unipupillate ocelli. Underside-—Hind-wing and apex of fore-wing whitish- grey, hatched with minute dark lines ; hind-wing with three irre- gular transverse brown streaks. Hab.—Cape Colony and Kaffraria. Family LYCHNID, Leach. Genus loraus, Hiibn. Tolaus Sidus. Exp. 1 in. 2 lin.—1 in. 3 lin. Allied (nearly) to J. Silas, Westw. . Bright pale-blue ; apical region of fore-wing broadly black; hind-wing with large, glistening-whitish, black-ringed, basi-costal circular patch, and two black-spotted, bluish-scaled, crimson-red spots at anal angle. Underside.—White tinged with greyish; one transverse ferruginous streak in fore-wing, two in hind-wing (the inner one becoming black and bi-angulated near inner margin) ; costa of fore-wing and hind-margin of hind-wing edged with orange, ¢@. Violaceous-whitish, blue-suffused from bases ; apical black of fore-wing narrower and duller; hind-wing with a blackish costal border (widest at apex), two dusky sub-marginal streaks, and three large anal-angular orange spots. Hab.—Kaffraria and Natal. Tolaus Bonwkeri. Exp. 1 in. 5 lin. @. Pale fuscous, suffused from bases with light blue; beyond middle a transverse, macular, white band; fore-wing with a fuscous, white-bordéred, disco-cellular streak; hind-wing with a sub-marginal, lunular, bluish-white streak which, on lobe of anal angle, unites with a marginal white line to form a white space (marked with a black spot). Underside.—White, with the some New Species of Butterflies. 177 following ochreous, brown-edged, irregular, transverse striz in each wing, viz.: a disco-cellular streak, a stria before middle, a broad one beyond middle, and a hind-marginal and sub-marginal line; the two strize of hind-wing acutely angulated, being diverted abruptly to base. ; Hab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria, Genus Lycana, Fab. Lycena Hintza. Exp. 11 lin.—1 in. 1 lin.. Caudate. Allied to LZ. Rosimon, Fab. $. Shining violet-blue ; a narrow hind-marginal blackish edging ; the ordinary blackish spot near anal angle of hind-wing. Underside.—White ; in each wing the following black markings, viz. a stria (broad in fore-wing) closing cell, an irregular trans- verse row of spots beyond middle, two sub-marginal rows of spots (the inner of sub-linear, the outer of small rounded spots), and a black edging-line ; fore-wing with a sub-costal and an upward- curving basal inner-marginal stria; hind-wing with six spots at base, and the last two spots of outer row faintly dotted with bluish-silvery. ¢. White, shot with violaceous-bluish from bases ; the black underside markings suffusedly repeated above, Cilia in both sexes white, in fore-wing interrupted with blackish, Hab.—British Kaffraria and Kaffraria. Genus Zeritis, Boisd. Zeritis Chrysaor. Exp. 10 lin.—1 in. 1 lin. Allied to Z. Zeuxo, Linn. Glittering golden-orange ; each wing with a disco-cellular spot (small and faint in hind-wing) and an irregular row of spots beyond middle; no sub-marginal row of spots in hind-wing; hind-mar- ginal border much narrower than in Zeuxo, and in hind-wing macular or nearly so. Underside-—Varying from pale creamy- ochreous to pale ferruginous-ochreous ; inner-marginal region of fore-wing pale-orange, its spots with large steely centres; spots of hind-wing small, slightly glistening. Hab.— Cape Colony, British Kaffraria and Kaffraria. 178 Mr. Roland Trimen’s Descriptions of Zeritis Pyroéis. Exp. 1 in.—1 in. 4 lin. Allied to Z. Zeuxo and Chrysaor. Orange-yellow (not metallic); spots as in Zeuro; bases broadly blackish, densely blue-scaled; hind-wing of ¢ shot with a blue lustre; in fore-wing a broad, very even, hind-marginal border of black; in hind-wing only an interrupted edging. Underside.— Much as in Chrysaor, pale creamy-ferruginous ; no basal cloud- ing; a sub-marginal row of fuscous spots in fore-wing ; spots of hind-wing usually very indistinct, if not obsolete. Hab.—Cape Town. Zeritis Phosphor. Exp. 10 lin. Allied to Z. Perion, Cram. (see Hopffer in Peters’ “ Reise,” &c.) Shining golden-orange; bases suffused with blackish-brown ; fore-wing with a very broad, dark, apical border, commencing on costa and narrowing near anal angle ; -hind-wing with a transverse row of dark spots beyond middle. Underside.—Very much as in Perion, 9; hind-wing and borders of fore-wing pale greyish- ochreous, hind-marginally tinged with reddish; cellular and neighbouring spots in fore-wing with steely centres; spots of hind-wing steely, dark-edged. Flab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria. Family HESPERIDZ, Leach. Genus Pyreus, Hibn. Pyrgus Asterodia. Exp. 9—10 lin. Nearly allied to P. Vindex, Cram., but paler, more glossy; the spots smaller, not so white; in fore-wing, the central of three cellular spots largest, nearer to outer than inner spot,—a trilinear spot just above central spot,—lowest spot of row beyond middle largest,—outer marginal row of spots wanting; in hind-wing transverse white stripe commences on costa, narrowing very much interiorly. Underside.—Hind-wing and apex of fore-wing less greyish, more inclining to fulvous. fHab.—Cape Colony. fe Pyrgus Sataspes. Exp. 93 lin.—1 in. $. Fuscous-brown; spots small, dull-whitish, rather suffused ; only two cellular spots in fore-wing; median band of hind-wing some New Species of Butterflies. 179 very much narrower than in P. Vindex; a double marginal row of ochrey dots in each wing. Underside.—Costa of fore-wing pale greyish-yellow, apex pale reddish-yellow ; hind-wing pale-fuscous, clouded with reddish, crossed by two yellowish-white stripes (of which the outer unites at anal angle with an inner-marginal whitish stripe). ?. Paler; spots more conspicuous. Underside of hind-wing reddish-ochreous, only fuscous-tinged next to stripes. Hab.—Cape Colony and British Kaffraria. Genus Cycropipes, Hiibn. Cyclopides inornatus. Exp. 1 in,—1 in, 1] lin. Allied to C. Lepeletierii, Godt. Dull-fuscous; cilia dull-grey ; from costa of fore-wing, beyond middle, a row of three indistinct pale dots. Underside.—Hind- wing, with costa and apex of fore-wing, reddish-brown ; in each wing a disco-cellular pale dot, succeeded by a transverse row (in hind-wing strongly curved) of similar dots. Hab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria. Genus Pampuita, Fab. Pamphila? niveostriga. Exp. 1 in. 2 lin.—1 in. 3 lin. g. Fuscous-brown, hind-wing darker; fore-wing with a disco- cellular white spot, and a transverse row of white spots. Under- side.—All pale reddish-ochreous, marked with paler nervures, except inner margin of fore-wing, which is fuscous, and that of hind-wing, which is snowy-white, edged interiorly with black. Hab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria. Pamphila Zeno. Exp. 1 in. 5 lin. Dark brown: in each wing a Jarge orange-yellow disco-cellular spot, followed by an irregular transverse row of six similar spots : bases irrorated with orange-yellow. Underside —Hind-wing and costa and apex of fore-wing greenish-yellow : hind-wing with a median and a submarginal, macular, fuscous band,—the latter joining the wider anal-angular portion of a blackish inner-mar- ginal stripe. Hab.— Bashee River, Kaffraria. VOL, IJ. THIRD SERIES, PART I1.—AuGusT, 1864. ry) 180 Mr. R. Triinen on New Species of Butterflies. Genus LevucocuiTonEa, Wler.* Leucochitonea bicolor. Exp. 1 in. 5 lin. $. Ochreous-yellow, deeper in hind-wing: fore-wing universally black-bordered, hind-wing also (except along costa); fore-wing with four large black spots, viz., one at base, 2nd cellular, 3rd below and beyond 2nd, 4th (largest) costal and towards apex. Under- side.— Yellow deeper; margins very narrow; spots of fore-wing indistinct. Hab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria. Genus Carrona, Wler.t Caprona Canopus. Exp. 1 in. 4 lin.—1 in. 7 lin. Semi-transparent creamy-white, with vitreous bands and spots: base in both wings and apical region of fore-wing ferruginous- ochreous. Underside——White purer; markings indistinct ; no basal colouring ; in fold of inner margin of hind-wing, near anal angle, a conspicuous black spot. Hab.—Kaffraria and Natal. Genus Nisontapes, Hiibn. Nisoniades Kobela. Exp. 1 in. 5 lin.—1 in. 10 lin. Same group as N. Sabadius, Boisd. Dusky blackish-brown, clouded with paler scales : in each wing a disco-cellular dark spot (in fore-wing always vitreous-centred in @ and sometimes in ¢ ), and a row of spots beyond middle (of which, in fore-wing, the three next costa are small and wholly vitreous in both sexes, and some of the others vitreous-centred in ?); near base of fore-wing, below cell, a large spot, sometimes pale-centred in 9. Underside.—Paler, more glossy: spots smaller, more distinct; inner margin of fore-wing dull-greyish; cell of hind- wing closed with a double streak, and spots bounded by, and often centred with, dull-yellowish scales. Cilia of fore-wing fuscous, of hind-wing greyish-yellow, regularly interrupted with fuscous. Hab.—Bashee River, Kaffraria. * Lep. Rhop. Caffr, (in K. Sv. Vetensk. Ak. Handlingar), p. 52. - + Ibid. p. 51. €: 18he4 VI. Characters of undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalci- dites), By Francis Watxer, F.LS., F.Z.S. {Read 6th June, 1864.] Smrera, of which a few species occur in various parts of the world, is most abundant in South America, and numerous forms of it inhabit the Amazon region, which seems to be especially adapted to the multiplicity of the species of that genus. All the species described in the following communication were discovered by Mr. Bates, and are in the collection of the British Museum. SYNOPSIS SPECIERUM. A Femora postica dentibus magnis armata. A Antenne filiformes. * Antenne apice non pallidiores. + Abdomen nigrum. { Femora postica dentibus 4 magnis armata. S. con- citata. tt Femora postica dentibus 5 magnis armata. § Tibize antice flavee. S. certa. §§ Tibize antice nigra. S. efficta. ++ Abdomen flavo- aut luteo-varium. { Femora postica dentibus 3 magnis armata. S.con- tacta. tt Femora postica dentibus 4 magnis armata. § Abdomen immaculatum. S. destinata. §§ Abdomen nigro-bimaculatum. S. crocuta. {tt Femora postica dentibus 5 magnis armata, § Antenne subtus non ochracez. x Abdomen nigro-fasciatum. 8S. appressa. x x Abdomen maculis lateralibus piceis. S. aperta. x x x Abdomen fasciis piceis. 8. cerina. §§ Antenne subtus ochracee. S. basilica. ttt? Femora postica dentibus 6 magnis armata. § Caput nigrum. S. composita. §§ Caput flavum aut luteum. x Abdomen vitta nigricante. S. admixta. x x Abdomen fasciis rufescentibus. S. de- JSuncta. ttttt Femora postica dentibus 7 magnis armata. S. adaptala. VOL. Il, THIRD SERIES, PART IlI,—Noy. 1864, P 182 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of $tet +b ++ Femora postica dentibus 8 magnis armata. S. cor- recta. Femora postica dentibus 9 magnis armata. S. eaxi- naniens. ** Antenne apice rufescentes. + Abdomen nigrum, basi flavum. S. seissa, ++ Abdomen fasciis interruptis nigris. S. @mula. +}? Abdomen flavum, immaculatum. S, adsita. *** Antenne apice lutea. SS. attalica. AA Antenne extrorsum crassiores. * Abdomen fusiforme. S'. contermina. ** Abdomen lanceolatum. S. commoda. AAA Antenne subclavate. SS. alienata. B Femora postica dentibus parvis armata. A Antenne filiformes. * Antenne apice non rufescentes, + Abdomen flavum, immaculatum. + Abdomen thorace mult6d brevius. 8S. dimota. Abdomen thorace paulld brevius. S. disposita. {} Abdomen flavum, apice nigrum. { Alee venis fulvis. S. expleta. Ale venis nigris. § Tibiz postice luteee. §. descripta. §§ Tibize posticee basi apiceque nigra. S. ex- haurtens. +tt Abdomen fasciatum. Corpus nigrum, flavo-varium. § Petiolus non brevissimus. x Abdomen luteum, igre peo muta: S, adjuncta. x x Abdomennigrum, fasciis flavis. S.blanda. §§ Petiolus brevissimus. 4S. vacillans. Corpus flavum, nigro-varium, § Alee anticee apice nigricantes. S. lerminalis. §§ Alze antice apice non nigricantes. x Alee cinereze. —+ Antenne scapo flavo. ++ Petiolus metathorace longior. S. equalis. +++ Petiolus metathorace brevior. S. contributa. —.+ Antenne scaposubtus flavo. S.celsa. xx Ale limpide, S, detracta, ++ ++ ‘Ss +444 bbe oe ca undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 183 ** Antenne apice rufescentes. + Corpus nigrum, flavo-varium. 8. annulifera. +} Corpus flavum aut luteum, nigro-varium, t Abdomen luteum. S. depicta. tt Abdomen notatum. § Corpus flavum. SS. annexa. §§ Corpus luteum, &. cognata. *** Antenne ochracee. §. demota. AA Antenne extrorsum crassiores. * Abdomen basi rufescens. S. apparata. ** Abdomen basi non rufescens. ‘+ Ale cinereee. S. deducta. +} Alee limpidee. SS. attacta. To the above species of Smiera I have added a single new spe- cies of the genus Chalcis, C. eurylomoides. 1. Smiera concitata. Foem.— Nigra; antenne scapo subtus flavo; prothorax luteo- bistrigatus ; parapsides et scutellum luteo-notata; pedes postici coxis flavo-vittatis, femoribus flavis apice nigris ; tarsi intermedii flavi, apice picei; alee obscuré cineree. Female.—Black. Antenne filiform; scape yellow beneath. Prothorax with a luteous transverse streak on each side. Parap- sides of the mesothorax with a luteous streak on the outer side; scutellum with a small luteous dot on each side, and with a pro- minent rim which is slightly bidentate. Petiole nearly as long as the metathorax. Abdomen slightly lanceolate, shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxez beneath with a broad yellow stripe, which does not extend to the tips; hind-femora yellow, black towards the tips, armed with four large and two very small black teeth; anterior knees and middle tarsi yellow, the latter piceous towards the tips; fore-tarsi piceous. Wings dark cinereous; veins piceous; ulna a little less than half the Jength of the humerus ; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus short, Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 9 lines. 2. Smiera certa. Mas.—Nigra; antenne subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; prothorax flavo-bistrigatus ; mesothoracis segmenta flavo- strigata; tibiae posticee luteo-strigatee ; tarsi lutei ; ale ob- scuré cineree. Male.—Black. Antenne filiform, reddish beneath ; seape with P 2 184 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of a yellow stripe beneath. Prothorax with a small transverse yellow streak on each side. A small yellow streak on each of the pa- rapsides and paraptera of the mesothorax; scutellum with an interrupted transverse yellow line on its fore-border, forming on its hind-border a slightly excavated rim. Metathorax vertical. Petiole a little longer than the metathorax. Abdomen nearly oval, shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-femora with one small and five very large teeth; hind-tibize with a luteous streak above towards the base; tarsi luteous; fore-tarsi piceous above towards the base. Wings dark cinereous ; veins piceous ; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus rather short. Length of the body 43 lines ; of the wings 9 lines. Female ?—Prothorax with a yellow line along each side and on the hind border, where it is widely interrupted. Scutellum with a yellow line along the hind-border. Metathorax oblique. Petiole a little shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen dingy luteous beneath. Hind-coxz yellow on the inner side towards the tips ; hind-femora with a yellow streak, which is largest on the inner side; hind-tibiz luteous on the inner side towards the base; anterior knees and tarsi yellow; hind-tarsi black. 3. Smiera efficta. Mas.—Nigra; oculi flavo-cincti; antennz subtus pice, scapo subtus flavo; thorax scuti margine antico, parapsidum lituris duabus transversis, scutellique margine postico flavis; ab- domen supra luridum ; pedes anteriores flavi, ex parte picei ; ale cineree, Male.—Black, stout. Head yellow about the eyes. Antenne filiform, piceous beneath ; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax bordered with yellow in front; a yellow transverse mark on each of the parapsides; scutellum yellow on the hind border, which is armed with two very Small teeth. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen elongate-oval, lurid above, shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind-femora armed with seven teeth, of which five are large; anterior legs yellow; anterior femora and middle tibize mostly piceous above. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus moderately long. Length of the body 4 lines ; of the wings 7 lines, 4, Smiera contacta. Mas.—Lutea; caput postice nigrum; antennee nigra, subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus luteo; prothorax fascia nigra luteo- undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 185 bipunctata ; mesothorax vittis tribus, guttis duabus vittaque scutelli postice dilatata nigris; pectus nigro-bistrigatum ; abdomen supra nigrum; pedes postici coxis apice nigris, femoribus nigro-triguttatis ; alae cinerea. Male.—Luteous. Head black behind. Antenne black, filiform, reddish beneath; scape luteous beneath. Hind-border of the prothorax with a narrow black band, which is slightly arched in front, and contains two luteous points. Mesothorax with three broad black stripes, one on the scutum and one on each of the parapsides ; paraptera black towards each other ; scutellum armed with two small teeth, adorned with a black stripe, which is dilated and abbreviated hindward. Pectus with a black transverse streak on each side. Petiole a little longer than the metathorax. Abdo- men elongate-oval, mostly black above, much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxe with black tips; hind-femora armed with three large teeth, adorned with three black dots, of which one is above, the second below, and the third apical. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna more than half the length of the humerus ; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 5 lines. 5. Smiera destinata. Fcem.—Lutea ; caput flavum, sulco antico margineque postico nigris ; antennz nigra, subtus rufescentes, scapo flavo; tho- rax scuti margine antico lineaque, parapsidum vittis duabus, parapteris ex parte, scutellique macula nigris; pedes postici coxis tibiisque apice nigris, femoribus nigro-bimaculatis et unistrigatis ; ale cinerea. Female.—Luteous. Head yellow, black behind and on the furrow for the reception of the scape. Antenne black, filiform, reddish beneath and towards the base ; scape yellow. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black line, which is connected with a short transverse black line on the fore-border; a black stripe on each of the parapsides; paraptera yellow, black towards each other ; scutellum armed with two small teeth, adorned at its tip with a black spot, which emits a line to the fore-border. Petiole a little longer than the metathorax. Abdomen oval, about twice the length of the petiole, very much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hlind-coxz with black tips; hind-femora armed with four very large teeth, which are mostly black, adorned on each side with two black spots (one apical, the other contiguous to the first tooth), and on the outer side above with a small black streak; hind-tibize with black tips. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna 186 Mr, F. Walker’s Characters of hardly half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 33 lines; of the wings 6 lines. 6. Smiera crocata. Foem.—Lutea, subtus flava; caput postice nigrum; antenne piceee, subtus fulvae, scapo subtus flavo; thorax scuti mar- gine antico lineaque, parapsidum maculis duabus elongatis, parapteris ex parte, scutellique macula tetragona nigris; ab- domen maculis duabus Jateralibus nigris ; pedes postici coxis apice nigris, femoribus nigro-bimaculatis ; alee cinerez. Female.—Luteous, yellow beneath. Head black behind. An- tennz piceous, filiform, tawny beneath; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black line, which is connected with a short transverse line on the fore-border, and is abbreviated hindward ; an elliptical black spot on each of the parapsides ; paraptera black towards each other; scutellum armed with two rather large teeth, adorned with a tetragonal black spot, which is attenuated towards the scutum. Petiole much longer than the metathorax. Abdomen elongate-oval, hardly twice the length of the petiole, with a black spot on each side near the tip. Hind- coxe with black tips; hind-femora armed with four very large teeth, which are mostly black, adorned beneath with two black spots, one before the middle, the other apical. Wings cinereous ; veins black ; ulna hardly half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 5 lines. \ ery. %. Smiera appressa. Feem.—Flava; caput sulco margineque postico nigris; an- tennz nigra, scapo flavo apice nigro; prothorax. strigis duabus transversis nigris ; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, flavo Jaté marginata; metathorax anticé nigro-marginatus ; abdo- men nigro-quadrifasciatum ; pedes postici femoribus tibiis- que basi apiceque nigris; femora intermedia piceo-strigata ; ale cineree. Female.—Yellow. Head black behind and on the furrow for the scape. Antenne black, filiform; scape yellow, black towards the tip above. Prothorax with a minute transverse black streak on each side. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax black, broadly bordered with yellow; paraptera black towards the scutum and along the hind-border; scutellum armed with two very short teeth, adorned with a nearly hexagonal black spot. undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 187 Metathorax with a black line along its fore-border. Disk of the pectus black. Petiole stout, much shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, slightly compressed towards its tip, much longer and narrower than the thorax; middle part adorned with four slender black bands. Hind-femora black at the tips and towards the base, whence the black hue extends along half the length of the upper border and along the whole of the lower border, which is armed with five large black teeth ; middle femora with a short piceous streak on the outer side; hind-tibiz black towards the base and towards the tips. Wings cinereous; veins black ; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short; spurious veins very distinct. Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 9 lines. SUN 6 Guy 8, Smiera aperta. Feem.—-Flava; caput nigro-bipunctatum; antennz picee, subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; thorax scuti punctis duobus lineaque transversa postica et parapsidum guttis duabus elongatis nigris; abdomen maculis octo lateralibus piceis ; pedes postici coxis tibiisque apice nigris, femoribus nigro- uniguttatis ; alae cinerea. Female.—Yellow. Head with two black points behind. An- tenne piceous, filiform, reddish beneath; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black point on each side of the fore-border, and with a short transverse black line on the hind- border; an elongated black dot on each of the parapsides; scu- tellum with two stout teeth. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen fusiform, with four piceous spots on each side, much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxze with black tips ; hind-femora with a black dot on the outer side at the base, armed beneath with seven black teeth, of which five are very large; hind-tibiz black on the outer side at the tips. Wings cinereous; veins black ; ulna fuliy half the length of the humerus; radius nearly as long as the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4§ lines ; of the wings 8 lines. 9, Smiera cerina. WMas.—F lava; antenne nigra subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; thorax scuti punctis duobus, parapsidum strigis duabus, scutellique striga nigris ; abdominis segmenta piceo-fasciata ; pedes postici coxis tibiisque apice nigris; alze cineree. Male.—Yellow. Antenne black, filiform, reddish beneath ; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black 188 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of point on each side of the fore-border; a short black streak on each of the parapsides ; scutellum with a short black streak, armed with two minute teeth. Petiole fully as long as the metathorax. Abdomen fusiform, with a piceous band on the fore-border of each segment, rather shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxze and hind-tibize with black tips; hind-femora armed with six teeth, five of which are large. Wings cinereous; veins black ; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 8 lines. i aerte “© | 40. Smiera basilica. Fem.—Flava; caput nigrum, oculis flavo-cinctis; antenne nigree, subtus ochracez, scapo pallidé flavo; scuti discus, parapsides apud marginem interiorem, paraptera ex parte, seutelli vitta posticé dilatata pectusque nigra; abdomen nigro-sex-fasciatum ; femora postica nigro-vittata ; tibiae pos- ticee rufescentes, apice flavee; alee anticee cinereze, apud costam subluride. Female.—Yellow. Head black, except about the eyes and towards the mouth. Antenne black, filiform, rather long and slender, ochraceous beneath; scape pale yellow, ochraceous above towards the tip; second joint ochraceous. Scutum of the mesothorax black, except along each side; parapsides black along the inner side; paraptera partly black ; scutellum with a black stripe, which is dilated on the hind-border, Pectus black. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, a little longer and much narrower than the thorax, adorned with six black bands. Hind-femora black, except ahove and towards the tips, armed with five large teeth ; hind-tibiz reddish, yellow towards the tips. Wings cinereous, with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins ochraceous; ulna less than half the length of the humerus; radius as Jong as the ulna; cubitus moderately long. Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 8 lines. 11. Smiera composita. Feem.—Nigra; oculi flavo-cincti; antennae scapo subtus flavo ; prothorax flavus, strigis duabus transversis nigris; meso- thoracis segmenta flavo-marginata; metathorax et petiolus nigri; abdomen basi fasciisque tribus flavis; pedes flavo- varil; ale cinerez. Female.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes. Antenne fili- form; scape yellow beneath. Prothorax yellow above, with a undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 189 black transverse streak on each side. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax yellow along the outer side; paraptera yellow towards the wings; scutellum yellow, with a black disk, armed with two very minute teeth. Metathorax and petiole yellow, the latter as long as the former. Abdomen lanceolate, much narrower and a little longer than the thorax, yellow at the base and with a yellow band near the tip; first and second segments with yellow hind-borders. Hind-coxz irregularly yellow above towards the base; hind-femora irregularly yellow above towards the tips, armed with six very large teeth ; anterior femora yellow towards their tips, this hue predominating most in the fore-femora; hind- tibiz with a yellow streak above towards the base; tarsi and anterior tibiz yellow, the former with black tips. Wings cinereous ; veins black; ulna a little more than half the length of the humerus ; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 4 lines ; of the wings 7 lines. 12. Smiera admizta. Mas.—ULutea; caput postice nigrum; antenne nigrze, scapo subtus luteo; prothorax nigro-biguttatus; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, Juteo-marginata; abdomen nigricante vittatum ; pedes postici coxis apice nigris, femoribus nigro- bimaculatis, tibiis piceo-vittatis; alee cinereze, apud costam subluride. Male.—Uuteous. Head black behind. Antenne black, fili- form; scape luteous beneath. Prothorax with a black dot on each side. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax black, with the exception of the borders; paraptera black towards the scutum; scutellum armed with two very short teeth, adorned with a nearly triangular black spot. Petiole as long as the meta- thorax. Abdomen fusiform, with a short irregular blackish stripe, shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxe black above towards their tips; hind-femora black beneath at their base and at their tips, armed beneath with: six large black teeth ; hind-tibize with a piceous stripe, which is widely inter- rupted towards the base. Wings cinereous, with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins black; ulna fully half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 43 lines; of the wings 8 lines. 13. Smiera defuncta. Feem.—Fiava ; antenne mgr, subtus rufee, scapo flavo; pro- thorax linea transversa rufescente-nigro-notata; mesothorax 190 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of vittis tribus, parapteris apud angulos interiores, scutellique vitta trigona nigris; petiolus vitta nigra furcata; abdominis segmenta rufescente fasciata; tibize postice nigro-lineate ; alee cinerez. Female.—Yellow. Antenne black, filiform, red beneath ; scape yellow. Prothorax with a reddish-black-marked trans- verse line. Mesothorax with a black stripe on the scutum, and one on each of the parapsides; paraptera black towards the scutum ; scutellum with a black triangular stripe resting on the hind border. Petiole linear, slender, much longer than the meta- thorax, with a black stripe, which is forked hindward. Abdomen fusiform, with a broad reddish band on each segment, narrower and a little longer than the thorax. Hind-femora armed with six large black-tipped teeth; hind-tibize with a black line on the outer side beneath. Wings cinereous; veins tawny; ulna hardly half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 9 lines. Aes 14 4 CU, h 14. Smiera adaptata. Fom.—Lete flava; caput posticé nigrum; antenne picee, subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; mesothorax scuti linea furcata, parapsidum guttis duabus, parapteris ex parte, scutellique vitta lanceolata nigris; pectus strigis quatuor lateralibus nigris; abdomen strigis utrinque quatuor trans-. versis nigris; pedes postici coxis apice nigris, femoribus maculis duabus nigris strigaque picea; ale cinerez, Female.—Bright yellow. Head black behind. Antennz piceous, filiform, rather short and stout, reddish beneath ; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black longi- tudinal line, which is forked in front; parapsides with an elongated black dot; -paraptera and epimera partly black; scutellum armed with two very minute teeth, adorned with a lanceolate black stripe, which is attenuated in front. Pectus with two black transverse streaks on each side. Petiole not longer than the metathorax. Abdomen fusiform, much shorter and very much narrower than the thorax, with four transverse black streaks on each side. Hind-coxee black towards the tips; hind- femora armed with seven large black-tipped teeth, adorned near the lower edge with two black spots, and on the outer side above with a fusiform piceous streak, Wings cinereous; veins black ; undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 191 ulna less than half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 33 lines; of the wings 6 lines. 15. Smiera correcta. Feem.— Flava; antenn nigrz, scapo subtus flavo; linea abbre- viata maculeque duz transversze scuti, maculae quatuor laterales posteriores trigonee, maculaque scutelli quadrata nigra ; abdomen apice nigrum; coxe postice apice tibiaeque posticee basi nigree; femora postica nigro-bimaculata; ale cinerea. Female.—Yellow, rather slender. Antenne black, filiform; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black line, which is abbreviated towards the fore-border, where there is a transverse black dot; a black triangular spot on each of the parapsides, and another on each of the paraptera; scuteliam with a black tetragonal spot near the hind-border, which is armed with two minute teeth. Petiole not longer than the metathorax. Ab- | domen lanceolate, narrower but hardly longer than the thorax ; tip black. Hind-coxze with black tips; hind-femora with two black spots by the lower side, armed with eight rather large black teeth; hind-tibia black at the base. Wings cinereous; veins piceous; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius a little shorter than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 7 lines. 16. Smiera exinaniens. Feem.—Nigra; oculi flavo-cincti; antennze scapo subtus flavo ; prothorax flavo-fasciatus ; mesothoracis segmenta flavo-mar- ginata; metathorax flavus, nigro-fasciatus; petiolus flavus, nigro-bivittatus ; abdomen basi fasciisque quatuor flavis ; pedes flavo-varii; ala cinerez, Female.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes. Antenne filiform ; scape yellow beneath. Prothorax with a yellow band. Secutum and parapsides of the mesothorax yellow along the outer side ; paraptera yellow towards the wings ; scutellum yellow, with a black disk and with two minute teeth. Metathorax yellow, with a black band on the fore-border. Petiole yellow, with a black stripe on each side, much shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, much narrower but not longer than the thorax; yellow towards the base, and with four yellow bands, of which the three first are interrupted and the fourth is abbreviated. 192 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of Hind-coxze irregularly yellow towards the base; hind-femora irregularly yellow towards the base and towards the tips, armed with about twelve teeth, of which nine are large; anterior femora yellow towards their tips; hind-tibize yellow above towards their tips; tarsi and anterior tibiee yellow, the former with black tips. Wings cinereous, veins black; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus short; spurious veins very distinct. Length of the body 44 lines; of the wings 8 lines. 17. Smiera scissa. Mas.—Nigra; caput anticé flavum; antenne apice rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; prothorax fascia flava nigro-bistrigata ; mesothorax segmentis flavo-marginatis, scutello fascia flava nigro-uniguttata; metathorax posticé luteus; petiolus flavus ; abdomen basi flavum ; pedes flavi, coxis femoribusque pos- ticis nigris basi flavis, femoribus posticis fascia arcuata flava, tibiis posticis basi nigris; ale cinereze. Male.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes and in front. . Antenne filiform, reddish at the tips; scape yellow beneath. Hind-border of the prothorax with a yellow band, which on each side is much dilated, and contains a black streak. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax bordered with yellow on the outer side; scutellum with a deeply angular yellow band, which con- tains a small black dot on the hind-border, the latter armed with two short teeth. Metathorax luteous towards the petiole. Petiole yellow, longer than the metathorax. Abdomen elongate, oval, yellow towards the base, very much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxe and hind-femora yellow towards the base; hind-femora with a yellow arched subapical band, armed with two small and five very large teeth; hind-tibize yellow for fully half the length from the tips; anterior legs and hind-tarsi yellow. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna less than half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus mode- rately long, clouded with brown. Length of the body 33 lines; of the wings 6 lines. 18. Smiera emula. Feem.—ULutea; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigree, apice rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; mesothorax niger, segmentis luteo-marginatis; metathorax anticé fascia angusta nigra; undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 193 abdomen fasciis quatuor interruptis nigris; cox postice nigro-vittatze ; ale anticee cineree, apud costam subluride. Female.—Luteous. Head black behind. Antenne black, slender, filiform, reddish at the tips; scape yellow beneath. Mesothorax black ; scutum, parapsides, paraptera and scutellum bordered with luteous; scutellum armed with two minute teeth. Metathorax with a narrow black band at the base. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, narrower but not longer than the thorax, with four interrupted black bands. Hind- coxe with a black stripe, which is dilated towards the tip ; hind- femora armed beneath with six large black teeth. Wings cine- reous, with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins brown; ulna more than half the length of the humerus; radius shorter than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 9 lines. 19. Smiera adsita. Fom.—¥Flava; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigre, apice rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, flavo Jaté marginata; metathorax lineola transversa nigra; pedes postici coxis femoribusque apice nigris; ale cineree. Female.—Yellow. Head black behind. Antenne black, slender, filiform, reddish at the tips; scape yellow beneath. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax black, broadly bordered with yellow ; paraptera black, except towards the wings ; scutellum armed with two very short teeth, adorned with a nearly triangular black spot. Metathorax with a short black transverse line on the fore-border. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, narrower but not shorter than the thorax. Hind-coxz and hind-femora with black tips ; hind-femora with seven teeth, which are mostly black, and of moderate size, with the exception of the second, which is small. Wings cinereous; veins tawny; ulna half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 7 lines. 20. Smiera altalica. Mas.—Lutea; caput flavum, vittis tribus anticis nigris ; antennz 3 Ca} , g piceze, subtus apiceque lutez, scapo flavo; prothorax flavus; scuti discus flavus; parapsides nigro-strigate ; paraptera 194% Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of nigro-guttata; scutellum linea nigra postice dilatata; abdomen piceo-quadrifasciatum ; coxz tibizque postice apice nigree ; femora postica nigro-varia ; alee anticz cinerez, apud costam subluridee. Male.—Luteous. Head yellow, with three black stripes in front, one on the furrow for the reception of the scape, and one on each side. Antenne piceous, filiform, luteous beneath and at the tips ; scape yellow. Prothorax yellow. Scutum of the mesothorax yellow, except on each side ; parapsides with a broad black streak, which is abbreviated hindward; a black dot on each of the paraptera; scutellum armed with two minute teeth, adorned with a black line, which is dilated hindward. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen elongate, elliptical, shorter and very much narrower than the thorax, adorned with four or five piceous bands. Hind-coxz with black tips; hind-femora black towards the base, adorned on the outer side with two abbreviated black lines which proceed from the black part, armed with eight large teeth; hind- tibiz black towards the tips. Wings cinereous, with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins pebreceous: ; ulna less than half the length of the humerus ; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus moderately long. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 73 lines. This may be the male of S. basilica (ante, p. 188). 21. Smiera contermina. Foem.—F lava; caput sulco antico margineque postico nigris ; antennz nigree, scapo subtus flavo; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, flavo-marginata; metathorax nigro-bipunctatus; ab- domen nigrum, basi flavum; pedes postici coxis supra nigris, femoribus nigro-vittatis ; alee cineree. Female.x—Yellow. Head black behind and on the furrow for the reception of the scape. Antenne black, very slightly increas- ing in thickness to the tips; scape yellow beneath; scutum and parapsides black, with the exception of their borders; paraptera black towards the scutum and along the hind-border; scutellum armed with two short teeth, adorned with a large triangular black spot. Metathorax with a black point on bap side. Petiole as long as the metathorax, Abdomen black, fusiform, yellow towards the base, shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind- coxe black above, except towards the base; hind-femora with a black stripe along the five very large black teeth. Wings cine- undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 195 reous; veins black; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius a little Jonger than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 44 lines; of the wings 8 lines. This species much resembles $. commoda, but may be distin- guished by the different shape of the abdomen and by the mark- ings on the hind-femora. \ \ bach UA eA \ 22, Smiera commoda. Foem.—Flava; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigree, scapo flavo; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, flavo-marginata; ab- domen nigrum, basi flavum; pedes postici coxis femoribus- que apice nigris; alze cinerea. Female.—Yellow. Head with a black band behind. Antenne black, slightly increasing in thickness to the tips; scape yellow. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax black, bordered with yellow; paraptera black on the inner side; scutellum with a large black spot, armed with two short teeth. Petiole a little longer than the metathorax. Abdomen black, lanceolate, yellow towards the base, shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind- coxe and hind-femora with black tips, the latter armed with five large teeth which are mostly black. Wings cinereous; veins blackish; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius a little shorter than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 6 lines. 23. Smiera alienata. Feem.—Nigra; caput anticé flavum, oculis flavo-cinctis; an- tennee apice truncatee, scapo flavo; thorax prothoracis mar- gine postico, parapsidum strigis duabus, parapteris ex parte, scutellique margine flavis; petiolus flavus; abdomen supra flavum, nigro-quadrifasciatum ; pedes flavo-vittati; alae ob- scuré cinerez. Female.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes and in front. Antenne subclavate, obliquely truncate at the tips; scape yellow. Hind-border of the prothorax yellow. An oblique yellow streak on each of the parapsides, and a yellow triangular dot on each of the paraptera; scutellum bordered with yellow except on each side in front, armed with two small-yellow teeth, Metathorax rugose. Petiole yellow, nearly as long as the metathorax, Ab- domen lanceolate, a little shorter and much narrower than the thorax, yellow above, with the exception of four black bands, of which the first is widely interrupted. Hind-coxe with two yellow 196 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of stripes, one above much longer and broader than the other, which is on the outer side; hind-femora with a widely-interrupted longi- tudinal yellow line on the outer side, and with an oblique yellow band on the inner side, armed with six large teeth; anterior tibize striped with yellow; anterior tarsi yellow, with black tips. Wings dark cinereous ; veins black; ulna less than half the length of the humerus; radius longer than the ulna; cubitus moderately long ; spurious veins very distinct. Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 9 lines. 24, Smiera dimota. Mas.—Flava; antenne nigra, subtus fulve, scapo subtus flavo; mesothorax scuti margine antico lineaque, parap- sidum strigis duabus, parapteris ex parte, scutellique gutta nigris; pedes postici coxis nigro-unimaculatis, femoribus apice nigris; alee cinereze. Male.—Yellow. Antenne black, filiform, pale tawny beneath; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black longitudinal line, which joins a transverse black line on the fore- border; abroad black streak on each of the parapsides; paraptera black on the angle towards the scutum; a small black dot near the tip of the scutellum, which is armed with two very short teeth. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen slightly lanceolate, much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxe with a large black spot on the outer side; hind-femora with black tips, armed with one large and with about twelve very minute teeth, which are mostly black. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius fully as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 5 lines. 25. Smiera disposita. Mas.—ULutea; antenne picee, subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus Juteo; mesothorax scuti linea, parapsidum punctis duobus, parapterisque ex parte nigris; coxa postice piceo-strigate ; alee cineree. Male,—Luteous, yellow beneath. Antenne piceous, filiform, reddish beneath; scape luteous beneath. Scutum of the meso- thorax with a black longitudinal line, which is continued on the fore part of the scutellum ; a black point on each of the parap- sides; paraptera black along the hind-border; scutellum armed with two extremely minute teeth. Pectus with a transverse black undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites), 197 streak on each side. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen slightly lanceolate, a little shorter and much narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxez with a short piccous streak on the outer side ; hind-femora armed with sixteen or more extremely minute black teeth. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulnaa little less than half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 23 lines; of the wings 4 lines. 26. Smiera expleta. Fom.—Flava ; antennz nigra, scapo flavo; scutellum piceo- Jineatum ; abdomen apice nigrum; alz subcinerez, venis fulvis. Female.— Yellow. Antenne black, long, slender, filiform ; scape yellow. Scutellum of the mesothorax with a piceous longitudinal line which does not extend to the tip, the latter armed with two very short teeth. Petiole stout, much shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, black at the tip, narrower and a little longer than the thorax. Hind-femora armed with one large and about twelve very minute teeth, which are mostly black. Wings slightly cinereous ; veins tawny; ulna fully balf the length of the humerus ; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short; stigma black. Length of the body 43 lines; of the wings 7 lines. 27. Smiera descripta. Feem.—Lutea; caput flavum, linea postica transversa nigra ; antennze nigra, scapo subtus luteo; mesothorax vittis duabus, strigis duabus exterioribus, linea transversa, guttaque postica nigris; abdomen apice nigrum; pedes postici coxis supra femoribusque apice nigris ; alee cineree. Fenale.—Luteous. Head yellow, with a black transverse line behind. Antenne black, filiform, rather slender ; scape ]uteous beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax with two black stripes, which are abbreviated hindward ; a black streak on each of the parapsides ; a black line on the hind-border of the scutum, ex- tending to the paraptera ; a black dot near the hind-border of the scutellum, which is armed with two very small teeth. Petiole shorter than the metathorax, Abdomen lanceolate, much longer and narrower than the thorax; tip black, Hind-coxe black above at the tips ; hind-femora with black tips, armed with many very minute teeth. Wings cinereous; veins black ; ulna a little VOL. Il. THIRD SERIFS, PART III.—NOV. 1864. Q 198 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of more than half the length of the humerus ; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 43 lines; of the wings 7 lines. 28. Smiera exhauriens. Feem.—Flava; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigre, scapo subtus flavo; mesothorax scuti vittis duabus, parapsidum strigis duabus, parapteris ex parte, scutellique gutta nigris ; abdomen apice nigrum; pedes postici coxis femoribusque apice nigris, tibiis basi apiceque nigris; alee subcineree. Female.—Yellow. Head behind with a short transverse black line. Antenne black, filiform; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mescthorax with two black stripes which converge hind- ward; an elliptical black streak on each of the parapsides ; paraptera black by the seutum; scutellum with a black dot near its tip, which is very slightly bidentate. Petiole stout, much shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, black at the tip, longer and much narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxe and hind-femora with a black apical spot on the upper side; hind- femora armed with one large tooth near the base, and with about sixteen very minute black teeth ; hind-tibiz black at the base and at the tips. Wings slightly cinereous; veins black ; ulna much less than half the length of the humerus; radius longer than the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 43 lines; of the wings 7 lines. 29. Smiera adjuncta. Mas.—Nigra; caput flavum, sulco antico margineque _postico nigris; prothorax flavus, nigro-bistrigatus ; mesothoracis segmenta flavo-marginata ; abdomen luteum, nigro-bifas- ciatum ; pedes flavi, nigro-varii; ale cinereze. Male.—Black. Head yellow, black behind and on the furrow for the scape. Antenne filiform. Prothorax yellow, with a little transverse black streak on each side. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax yellow along the outer side; paraptera yellow towards the wings; scutellum yellow, with a black disk and with two very short teeth. Metathorax yellow, black along the fore~ border. Petiole yellow, shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen luteous, much shorter and narrower than the thorax, with two black bands which are connected in the middle and on each side and occupy the 2nd and 3rd segments. Legs yellow ; hind-coxx with black tips; hind-femora with three black spots on each side undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 199 (the Ist and 2nd spots connected at the base, the 3rd apical), and with about sixteen very minute black teeth ; hind-tibiz black, with a broad yellow band near the base; middle femora and fore-tibize with a piceous streak. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna fully half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4 lines ; of the wings 7 lines. This species has a close resemblance to S. blanda. 30. Smiera blanda. Nigra; caput anticé flavum, oculis flavo-cinctis; antennz scapo subtus flavo; prothorax flavus, nigro-bistrigatus ; meso- thoracis segmenta flavo-marginata; metathorax flavus, nigro- bifasciatus ; petiolus flavus; abdomen basi fasciisque flavis ; pedes flavi, nigro-varii ; alee cinerez. Male—Female.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes and in front. Antenne filiform; scape yellow beneath. Prothorax yellow, with a transverse black streak on each side. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax yellow along the outer side, the former with a small yellow dot in the middle; paraptera with a yellow spot towards the wings; scutellum yellow with a black disk and with two minute teeth. Metathorax yellow, black along the fore-border and in the middle. Petiole yellow, as long as the 'metathorax. Abdomen elongate-oval, much shorter and narrower than the thorax, yellow towards the base, and with a yellow band on the hind-border of each segment. Legs yellow; hind-coxz with black tips, and with an elongate black spot onthe outer side; hind-femora with a black spot on the outer side above and with two black spots on each side by the lower edge, which is armed with one large and with about nine minute black teeth; hind-tibize black towards the base. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna less than half the length of the humerus ; radius longer than the ulna ; cubitus short. Length of the body 4 lines ; of the wings 7 lines. 31. Smiera vacillans. Feem.—Nigra; caput antice flavum; antenne robusta, scapo subtus flavo ; prothorax et mesothoracis segmenta flavo- marginata ; petiolus flavus, brevissimus; abdomen dimidio antico flavo; pedes femoribus posticis flavo-trimaculatis, tibiis tarsisque anterioribus tarsisque posticis flavis; ale cinerez, Female.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes and in front. Q2 200 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of Antenne stout, filiform; scape yellow beneath. Hind-border of the prothorax with a yellow band, which is dilated on each side. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax bordered with yellow on the outer side; scutellum with a deeply angular yellow band on its hind-border, which is armed with two short teeth. Petiole yellow, very short. Abdomen slightly lanceolate, yellow for nearly half the length from the base, much narrower but not longer than the thorax. Hind-femora with a large yellow spot above on both sides, and with two small yellow spots on the outer side by the lower border, which is armed with several very minute teeth ; anterior knees, tibise and tarsi, and hind-tarsi yellow. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna less than half the length of the humerus; radius longer than the ulna; cubitus moderately long. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 7 lines. 32. Smiera terminalis. Mas.—Lutea ; antenne picee, filiformes, subtus rufescentes, scapo luteo; mesothorax nigro-quadrimaculatus ; abdomen supra nigrum ; pedes coxis posticis supra, femoribus posticis apice, tibiisque posticis basi apiceque nigris; ala antica cineree, apice nigricantes. Male.—Luteous. Antenne piceous, filiform, reddish beneath ; scape ]uteous. Mesothorax with an elongated black spot on the scutum, and with a black callus at the base of each fore-wing ; scutellum armed with two very small teeth, adorned with a black disk. Petiole slender, longer than the metathorax. Abdomen elliptical, shorter and narrower than the thorax, black above, except towards the base; hind-coxz black above, except towards the base; hind-femora with black tips, moderately incrassated, armed with about sixteen very minute teeth; hind-tibie black at the base and towards the tips. Wings cinereous. Fore-wings with blackish tips; veins black ; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius longer than the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 5 lines. 33. Smiera equalis. Mas.—Flava ; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigra, scapo flavo; mesothorax vittis tribus latis, parapteris ex maxima parte, scutellique macula tetragona nigris; abdomen strigis Jateralibus transversis nigris; pedes postici coxis nigro-uni- maculatis, femoribus nigro-trimaculatis; ale cinereee. Male.—Yellow. Head black behind. Antenne black, filiform ; undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 201 scape yellow. Mesothorax with three broad black stripes, one on the scutum and one on each of the parapsides; paraptera mostly black; seutellum with a tetragonal black spot, which is attenuated in front. Petiole linear, much longer than the meta- thorax, and more than half the length of the abdomen. Abdomen elliptical, much shorter and narrower than the thorax, with some transverse black streaks on each side. Hind-coxee with a black spot on the outer side; hind-femora with three black spots on each side, armed beneath with several minute teeth. Wings cinereous ; veins black ; ulna a little more than half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 23 lines; of the wings 4 lines. 34. Smiera contributa. Mas.—Flava; caput macula antica nigra; antenne nigre, subtus rufescentes, scapo flavo; prothorax fascia abbreviata nigra; mesothorax niger, vittis duabus maculisque duabus exterioribus flavis, scutello flavo, macula postica nigra ; pedes postici coxis femoribusque nigro-vittatis, tibiis posticis basi apiceque nigris ; alz cinerez, Male.—Yellow. Head paler in front, with a black spot between the base of the antenne and the mouth. Antenne black, filiform, reddish beneath, shorter than the thorax; scape yellow. Pro- thorax with a black abbreviated band in front. Mesothorax black ; scutum with two yellow stripes, which converge hindward; parapsides yellow towards the fore-wings ; scutellum yellow, with a black spot hindward, armed with two very minute teeth. Petiole a little shorter than the metathorax. Abdomen fusiform, b'ack above, except towards the base, much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxz with a broad black stripe on each side; hind-femora with a black stripe on each side, that on the inner side interrupted ; teeth numerous, very minute; hind-tibiz black at the base and towards the tips. Wings cinereous; veins black ; ulna hardly half the length of the humerus, which is yellow ; radius fully as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 5 lines. ti 35. Smiera celsa. Feem.—Leté flava; antennz nigre, scapo subtus flavo; meso- thorax scuti macula trigona, strigis duabus parapsidum, pa- rapteris apud margines, scutellique vitta interrupta nigris ; metathorax fascia angulata nigra; pectus nigrum; abdomen 202 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of fasciis quinque apiceque nigris; pedes nigro-varii; ale cineree. Female.— Bright yellow. Antennz black, filiform, not longer than the thorax; scape yellow beneath. Mesothorax with a black triangular mark on the scutum, and with a black streak on each of the parapsides; paraptera bordered with black ; scutellum with an interrupted black stripe. Metathorax with an angular black band. Mesopectus and metapectus black. Petiole not longer than the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, pubescent towards the tip, longer and narrower than the thorax, with five black bands, which are eneous on each side, tip black. Legs pubescent; hind-coxz with a black spot on the outer side and with black tips; hind-trochanters black; hind-femora with many minute teeth, and with one large tooth near the base, black at the base and at the tip, with a black transverse spot on the middle of the outer side; hind-tibize black at the base. Wings cinereous ; veins black; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 33 lines; of the wings 6 lines. 36. Smiera detracta. Mas.—Flava; antenne nigre, subtus rufescentes, scapo subtus flavo ; abdomen luteum, fasciis quinque obscurioribus ; pedes postici lutei; alae limpide. Male.—Yellow. Abdomen and hind-legs luteous. Antenne black, filiform, reddish beneath; scape yellow beneath. Scutellum of the mesothorax armed with two extremely small teeth. Petiole nearly as long as the metathorax. Abdomen slightly lanceolate, much shorter and narrower than the thorax, adorned with five darker bands on the fore-borders of the segments. Hind-femora armed with one large and twelve very minute teeth, which are mostly black. Wings limpid; veins piceous; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; eubitus very short. Length of the body 22 lines; of the wings 43 lines. 37. Smiera annulifera. Fem.—Nigra; caput anticé flavum; antennze apice subtusque rufze, scapo subtus flavo; prothorax fascia flava nigro- ~ biguttata; mesothorax segmentis flavo-marginatis, scutello undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcidites). 208 flavo, fasciis duabus vittaque nigris; petiolus brevissimus ; pedes flavi, femoribus posticis nigris flavo-fasciatis, tibiis pos- ticis nigris ; alee cinerez, striga costali apicibusque fuscis. Female.—Black. Head yellow about the eyes and in front. Antenne filiform, red at the tips and beneath; scape yellow beneath. Hind border of the prothorax with a yellow band, which on each side is dilated and forked, and contains a black dot. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax bordered with yellow on the outer side; a large black spot on each of the yellow paraptera; scutellum yellow, armed with two short teeth, adorned with two black bands, which are connected by a black stripe; first band semicircular, much broader than the second. Petiole very short. Abdomen lanceolate, much narrower but very little longer than the thorax. Hind-femora adorned with a curved transverse yellow line on each side near the tips, armed with about twelve very minute teeth; hind-tarsi and anterior legs yellow. Wings cinereous, brown along the ulna and towards the tips; veins black, ulna less than half the length of the humerus; radius much longer than the ulna; cubitus moderately long. Length of the body 33 lines ; of the wings 6 lines. 38. Smiera depicta. Feem.—Flava; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigre, apice rufescentes, scapo subtus luteo; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, flavo laté marginata; abdomen luteum; _pedes postici coxis femoribusque apice nigris; alee cinerea. Female.—Luteous. Head and thorax yellow. Head black behind. Antenne black, slender, filiform, dark reddish at the tips; scape luteous beneath; scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax black, broadly bordered with yellow; paraptera black towards the scutum; scutellum armed with two very short teeth, adorned with a large black spot, which is acutely angular towards the scutum. Petiole stout, much shorter than the meta- thorax. Abdomen lanceolate, narrower and a little longer than the thorax ; sheaths of the oviduct with black tips. Hind-coxz and hind-femora with black tips; hind-femora armed with one large and with about twelve very minute teeth, which are mostly black. Wings cinereous; veins piceous; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius longer than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4} lines; of the wings § lines. 204 Mr. I. Walker’s Characters of 39. Smiera annexa. Feem.—Flava; caput posticé nigrum; antenne nigra, apice subtusque rufescentes, scapo flavo; prothorax nigro-bipunc- tatus; mesothoracis segmenta nigra, flavo-marginata; abdo- men piceum, basi flavescens; pedes postici coxis apice tibiis- que basi nigris, femoribus nigro-bimaculatis; alee antice cinerez, apud costam subluride. Female.—Yellow. Head black behind and about the ocelli. Antenne reddish, black above, except towards the tips; scape yellow. Prothorax with an elongated black point on each side by the hind-angle. Scutum and parapsides of the mesothorax black, broadly bordered with yellow; paraptera black towards the scutum; scutellum armed with two short teeth, adorned with a black spot, which forms a short transverse ellipse. Petiole piceous towards the tip, as long as the metathorax. Abdomen piceous, elongate-oval, yellowish towards the base, much shorter and narrower than the thorax. Hind-coxe with black tips; hind- femora with twelve minute teeth, with two black spots beneath, the first extending from the first to the fifth tooth, the second apical; hind-tibiz black towards the base. Wings cinereous, with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins black; ulna hardly half the length of the humerus; radius longer than the ulna; cubitus rather short. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 8 lines. 40. Smiera cognata. Feem.—Lutea; caput anticé flavum, posticé nigrum; antenne piceze, subtus apiceque rufe, scapo flavo; thorax punctis duobus anticis, scuti vitta cyathiformi, parapsidum vittis duabus, parapteris ex parte, scutellique macula nigris ; abdo- men plaga postica nigricante; pedes postici coxis apice tibiisque basi nigris, femoribus nigro-bimaculatis; ale cinerez. Female.—Luteous. Head yellow in front, black behind and between the ocelli. Antenne piceous, filiform, red beneath and towards the tips; scape yellow. Prothorax with a black point on each side. Scutum of the mesothorax with a cyathiform black stripe; a black stripe on each of the parapsides; paraptera yellow, black where they approach each other; scutellum with a large black spot on the disk, armed with two very short teeth. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen elongate-oval, very much shorter and narrower than the thorax, with a blackish patch undescribed Species of Smiera (Chalcilites). 205 on the hind part above. Hind-coxe with black tips; hind- femora armed with eleven small teeth, adorned on each side with an apical black spot, and on the outer side with a black spot near the base; hind-tibize black towards the base. Wings cinereous ; veins black; ulna a little less than half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus short. Length of the body 4 lines; of the wings 8 lines. 41. Smicra demota. Foem.—Flava; caput posticé nigrum; antennze ochracee, basi supra pice; prothorax fascia antica punctisque duobus posticis nigris; scuti discus, parapsidum vittz due late, paraptera ex parte, scutellique macula conica nigra; abdomen rufescens nigro-quadrifasciatum, apice flavum; pedes postici piceo-strigati ; alee anticee cinerea, apud costam subluride. Female-—Yellow. Head black behind. Antenne filiform, ochraceous, piceous towards the base above. Prothorax with a black band in front, and with a black point on each side hindward. Scutum of the mesothorax black, except along the outer side; a broad black stripe on each of the parapsides; paraptera partly black; scutellum with a conical black spot. Petiole a little longer than the metathorax. Abdomen fusiform, a little longer and very much narrower than the thorax, reddish except towards the tip, with four black bands, of which the Ist and the 4th are inter- rupted. Hind-coxe with a piceous streak on the outer side; hind-femora with a piceous streak on the inner side, armed with several minute teeth. Wings cinereous. Fore-wings with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins piceous; ulna about half the length of the humerus; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus moderately long. Length of the body 4 lines ; of the wings 7 lines. 42, Smiera apparata. Feem.—Lutea ; caput anticé flavescens, linea postica transversa nigra; antenne nigra, basi rufescentes, scapo flavo; pro- thorax linea transversa interrupta nigra; mesothorax seg- mentis nigris luteo-marginatis, scutello luteo macula tetragona nigra; abdomen nigrum, basi luteum; pedes coxis posticis apice nigris, tibiis posticis linea abbreviata nigricante ; ale cinerez, apud costam subluride. Female.—Luteous. Head pale yellowish in front, with a black transverse line behind the vertex. Antenne black, reddish 206 Mr. F. Walker’s Characters of towards the base, slightly increasing in thickness towards the tips; scape yellow. Prothorax with a black transverse interrupted line. Mesothorax with the scutum and the parapsides black, bordered with luteous; paraptera black except on the outer side; scutellum with a black tetragonal spot, armed with two small teeth. Petiole linear, fully as long as the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, black, luteous towards the base, narrower but not longer than the thorax. Hind-coxe black towards the tips ; hind-femora armed with several minute black teeth; hind-tibiz with a blackish ab- breviated line on the upperside. Wings cinereous, with a lurid tinge towards the costa; veins tawny; ulna rather more than half the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus rather short. Length of the body 5 lines; of the wings 9 lines. 43. Smiera deducta. Feem.—Flava; caput gutta antica fasciaque postica nigris ; antennz nigree, scapo subtus flavo ; mesothorax scuti disco, parapsidum vittis duabus, parapteris, scutellique macula conica nigris ; pectoris discus niger; abdomen fasciis tribus con- nexis apiceque nigris; pedes postici coxis, femorum maculis duabus, tibiisque basi nigris ; alee cinerez. Female.-—Yellow. Head black behind, and with a black dot between the base of the antenne and the mouth. Antenne black, slightly increasing in thickness to the tips; scape yellow beneath. Scutum of the mesothorax black, except along each side; parap- sides black along the inner side; paraptera black ; scutellum with a black conical spot which rests on the hind-border. Metathorax with a black transverse line at the base. Disk of the pectus black. Petiole not longer than the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, much longer and narrower than the thorax, with three black con- nected dorsal bands, the 3rd band connected with the apical black part, which comprises about two-fifths of the whole length. Hind- coxe black ; hind-femora armed with several very minute teeth, adorned with two black spots, which are connected below on the outer side ; hind-tibiz black at the base. Wings cinereous ; veins black ; ulna a little more than half the length of the humerus ; radius as long as the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 2 lines; of the wings 3 lines. 44. Smiera attacta. Foem.—F lava; caput posticé nigrum; antennz nigrze, subtus rufescentes, scapo flavo; prothorax gutta antica nigra; meso- undescribed Species of Chalcidites. 207 thorax guttis duabus vittaque, strigis duabus guttisque duabus posterioribus, vittaque scutelli nigris; pedes postici coxis nigro-guttatis, femoribus apice nigris; ale limpide. Female.—Yellow. Head black behind. Antenne black, red- dish beneath, slightly increasing in thickness to the tips; scape yellow. Prothorax with a black dot in front. Scutum of the mesothorax with a black dot on each side in front and with a black stripe; a black streak on each of the parapsides and a black dot on each of the paraptera; scutellum with an abbreviated black stripe. Metathorax with a black stripe. Petiole as long as the metathorax. Abdomen lanceolate, pale reddish, much narrower but hardly Jonger than the thorax ; hind-borders of the segments paler. Hind-coxze with a black spot on the outer side; hind- femora with black tips, armed with many very minute teeth. Wings limpid ; veins black ; ulna little more than one-third of the length of the humerus; radius a little longer than the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 3 lines; of the wings 4 lines. Genus Cuatcis. Chalcis eurytomoides. Fom.—Nigra; antennze robuste, scapo flavo; thorax callis duobus flavis, scutello inermi; abdomen subsessile, sublanceo- latum; pedes flavi, coxis posticis supra nigris, femoribus posticis nigro-fasciatis, femoribus anterioribus basi nigris, tibiis anterioribus nigro-strigatis ; alee cinerez. Female.— Black. Antennz stout, filiform; scape yellow. Thorax with a yellow callus at the base of each fore-wing ; scutellum unarmed. Abdomen subsessile, slightly lanceolate, longer and a little narrower than the thorax. Legs yellow ; hind- coxe black above; hind-femora armed with about six very minute teeth, adorned with a broad black band which extends above to the base and on the lower side to the tip; anterior femora black towards the base on the outer side; anterior tibize with a black streak on the outer side. Wings cinereous; veins black; ulna more than half the length of the humerus; radius less than one-third of the length of the ulna; cubitus very short. Length of the body 43 lines ; of the wings 7 lines. Note.—I am indebted to Mr. Dunning for observing that I have applied the name Sosrelra to two genera of insects. See Trans. Ent. Soc., Third Series, Vol. I. pp. 84, 370. The name Eudoainna may be substituted for Soszetra, ( 209 ) VII. Notes on the Genus Hydaticus (Leach), with De- scriptions of new Species. By the Rev. Hamuer Ciark, M.A., F.L.S., V.-P. Ent. Soc. [Read Ist August, 1864. ] Durine Dr. Schaum’s late visit to England, he was good enough to propose to me that we should combine together to prepare a complete and accurate Catalogue of all the known species of Hydrocantharide, with the object of offering our manuscript to the trustees of the British Museum as a second edition of their Catalogue of this interesting group (the first edition, prepared in 1847 by Dr. Schaum and Mr. Adam White, having long since been exhausted): very willingly I accepted his suggestion, and hence have occupied myself in examining the exotic species of the different genera, being not without hope that the Museum autho- rities would receive such a contribution, especially as Dr. Schaum has, with infinite labour, succeeded in mastering the most difficult portion of the work, the elucidation and determination of the /uro- pean species, for his forthcoming volume of Erichson’s Naturgesch. d. Ins. Deutsch]. The following notes are the result of my exa- mination of the species of //ydaticus, a genus which, in ccloration of the forms composing it, is the most beautiful of all. I ought to add, that Dr. Gray, some months ago, most liberally placed at my disposal for examination the undescribed species of the genus in the Museum Collection. At that time, however, I was unable to enter upon the subject, and therefore returned the specimens. The following paper, being prepared in the country, does not con- tain descriptions of those new species referred to in the British Museum Catalogue under manuscript names, It is worthy of remark, that the most important additions that have been made during the last few years to my collection of this group have been made by non-entomological friends residing abroad, who have kindly interested themselves in sending home, from time to time, the results of their examination of their re- spective neighbourhoods. Englishmen, like water-beetles, are found in every region of the globe. There are few Entomologists who have not one or more friends living for a time in some foreign 210 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the country. If only these could be induced to pay attention to the beautiful forms of insect-life around them, the advantage would be twofold: not only would they find, to their surprise, that such a rational pursuit would beguile many weary hours, and give real interest to a locality which perchance otherwise would be the opposite of interesting, but science itself would be the gainer, for we might thus obtain some knowledge of the life-history of insects of which at present we know nothing, except the external forms. When we are told that upwards of thirty species of Coleoptera have been found in the court of the British Museum itself, in the very heart of London, we may be sure that there is no spot on the earth, however apparently uninviting, that will not amply repay investigation. 1. H. Bakemellii, n. sp. (Pl. XIV. fig. 1.) Ovalis, depressus, niger, flavo- maculatus: capite flavo, ad apicem vel nigro-bimaculato, vel omnino nigro; thorace nigro, lateribus vittAque transversali in medio interrupta flavis ; elytris ovalibus, pone medium depressis, subtilissimé punc- tatis, punctorum etiam seriebus duabus obscuris (hac juxta medium penitus obsoleta), nigris, maculis utrinque 4 flavis magnis, 1™ ad scutellum subcirculari, 2"4? apud humeros juxta marginem longitudinaliter inzequali, 3* fascia lata pone medium (haud suturam attinente) transversim disposiia, 4 subcirculari juxta apicem, haud suturam sed marginem ap- proximante, apice quoque subtiliter flavo-maculato ; antennis flavis: corpore subtus nigro; pedibus rufo-flavis, femoribus posticis fuscis. Long. corp. lin. 7; lat. lin, 4. The species may be recognized by its tolerably even post-medial oroad transverse bar of flavous, which, in form, is unlike that of any other species of the genus. I have received several examples at different times, which present only two forms of pattern; the typical one, of which the above is the diagnosis, and a darker pattern, in which all the maculz are considerably reduced in size, and the transverse bar of the elytra commuted into two trans- versely-arranged spots. ‘The transverse flavous bar of the thorax is also, in this latter pattern, obliterated. This handsome species appears to be not uncommon in the neighbourhood of Moreton Bay, whence I have received it from my valued correspondent, Mr. Diggles. I name it after my friend R. Bakewell, Esq., who kindly supplied the first example to my Genus Hydaticus. PA collection, and to whose courteous liberality I am much indebted for assistance in my entomological researches. In the cabinets also of the British Museum, and R. Bake- well, Esq. 2. H. bihamatus (Esch. Dej. Cat.); Aubé (Spec. Gen. 174). This species is the same as H. Goryi, Aubé (Spec. Gen. L75), and also is identical with //. scriptus of Blanchard in Homb. et Jacq. ;* the insect has a very extended range, being found in the Philippine Islands (whence I have received it from Mr. Thorey), in Aru (taken by Mr. Wallace), New Holland, Moreton Bay (received at different times by Mr. Stevens), Amboina, in New Guinea, Batchian and Ceylon. I have also a fine series of the insect taken by the late lamented M. Mouhot, in Cambodia, in which the flavous markings are almost entirely absent. 3. H. Adamsii, n. sp. Laté ovatus, satis rotundatus, medio dilatatus, fusco-cinereus, flavo-irroratus: capite flavo, ad basin transversé nigro, etiam- que apud medium macula angulata litteram V_ formanti; thorace flavo, antice tenuiter et ad basin latius nigro-margi- nato; scutello nigro; elytris latis, nigris, levibus, nitidis ; undique punctorum tres series apparent, puncta ipsa rara, haud profunda, aliquando (et presertim serie &* ad mar- ginem) obsoleta; elytra multitudine macularum minutarum irrorata sunt; macule conferte, flava, juxta latera et basin confluentes ; margines ipsi flavi, sutura tenuiter nigra ap- paret: corpore sublus nigro; pedibus rufo- vel fusco-flavis, tarsis tibiisque posticis nigris ; antennis rufis. Long. corp. lin. 63; lat. lin. 4. A species which at first sight reminds us of the European species /, bilineatus, De Geer; but while in general pattern it exactly resembles this species, it is entirely distinct: in size it is much shorter (63 lin. instead of 7 lin.), the head is less produced, the apical margination is narrower and the basal broader, and the underside is black instead of rufo-flavous, I received this form with other interesting species from Mr. Adams, who took two specimens of it on the coast of China. I * T believe that H. pacificus also of M. Aubé (Spec. Gen. 177) will ultimately prove to be but a variety of it. I have in my cabinet one or two examples of H, bihamatus, which almost accurately agree with his description of H. pacificus, PAE Rey. H. Clark’s Notes on the with many others have to thank Mr. Adams for much precious information respecting species of eastern Coleoptera. 4. H. quadrivittatus, Blanchard (Voy. au Pol. Sud. p. 48, pl. iv. fig. 3). I have examined carefully all the reputed examples of this insect in the British Museum, as well as in the cabinet of Mr. Bakewell and my own, and confess that I am unable to discover, either by examples within my reach or by Blanchard’s description, any material difference between this form and the widely dispersed and somewhat variable A. vittatus of Fabricius; the two are identical in size and shape and degree of punctuation; the only difference seems to me to consist in the character ‘of the longi- tudinal marking, which in H, vittatus is expressed by one broad marginal band, more or less longitudinally interrupted from the shoulder, and in H. 4-vittatus by two marginal bands with some little interval between them: how nearly the two approach each other it does not require the aid of a long series of examples to discover; in 4-v2ttatus the bands are parallel to each other, the outer one being considerably abbreviated; in vittatus the two bands are medially confluent. Whether, however, the two forms may ultimately prove to be distinct or not, the retention of the two names may be desirable ; the former representing a modification of the externa] marginal band which only obtains in Australasia. Blanchard gives as the nearest affinity to his insect H. Hybnert of Europe, with which it has very little indeed in common. 5. H. aruspex, n. sp. Oblongo-ovalis, parailelus, punctato-striatus, subnitidus, niger : capite flavo, ad basin laté nigro (inter oculos, apnd vitte nigree marginem, flavo-bimaculato); thorace lateribus rotun- datis, marginem juxta undique impresso, et anticé transverse (sed obsolete et tenuiter) depresso, et punctato; quoad colorem flavo, ad basin late et transverse nigro (vitta nigra ad medium lata, latera versus tenuior, haud margines attinet); scutello transverso-triangulari, nitido, nigro; elytris parallelis, crebre subtilissimé punctatis, etiamque seriebus 3 punctorum (quorum externa penitus obsoleta est) ornatis, colore nigris, marginibus undique laté et equaliter a humeris penitus ad apicem fiavis ; corpore subtus nigro-fusco; pedibus rufis ; an- tennis rufo-flavis. Long. corp. lin. 63; lat. lin. 33. | Genus Hydaticus. 213 Parallel in form, like ruficollis, Fab., though much narrower than that insect: the species before us is remarkable also by its broadly flavous or testaceous thorax combined with the uniform blackness of the elytra, relieved only by the broad and evenly- disposed flavous margination, which extends from the humeral angles nearly to the apex. I obtained a single example some years ago in the Gory Col- lection, from China, ; 6. H. verecundus, n. sp. Ovalis. parallelus, punctato-striatus, nitidus, niger, flavo-notatus; capite flavo, ad basin transversé nigro, inter oculos macule duz flave triangulares, sese attingentes, apparent; thorace brevi, lateribus rotundatis, anticé transversé tenuiter depresso, flavo, marginibus antico posticoque laté nigris (margo anterior, latitudine zequalis, haud latera attinet; margo basalis, ad medium anteriore latior, sensim angustior fit, et tenuis latera pertingit) ; scutello triangulari, nigro; elytris sat parellelis (pone medium sublatioribus), apice rotundato, haud at- tenuato; punctorum tres series undique apparent, puncta distantia, minime profunda, attamen perspicua et in seriebus anda et 3!* minus obsoleta; quoad colorem elytra nigra ap- parent; vitta basalis a scutello ad humeros extendit, haud basin attingens, tenuis, equalis, recta (aut sub-circularis et ad marginem medium leviter sese flectens), ad vittae terminum margo usque ad humerum laté flavescit ; pone medium inter seriem punctorum 3*” et marginem macula flava apparet, sub- quadrata aut aliquando in duas divisa; ad apicem quoque altera, major, figura et statura incerta (nunc macula insularis ad ipsum marginem, nunc vitta transversalis, inzequalis, communis, lata, et ad apicem ipsum pertingens) ; corpore subtus nigro-fusco ; antennis flavis ; pedibus flavis, posticis fuscis et flavo-annulatis. Long. corp. lin. 4; lat. lin. 24. One of the smallest species of the genus; and to be also re- cognised by its more than usually distinct punctuation, as well as by the pale regular transverse band on its black elytra. It is nearly allied to a species in my collection, “ basalis, Dej.,” from North America, but much smaller. Iam sorry to say that the two examples in my possession forbid me to register the habitat of this insect with certainty: one of them is labelled South America, the other (from the Gehin Collection) Java. VOL. II. THIRD SERIES, PART 11!.—wNOV. 1864. R 214 Rev. H. Clark’s Motes on the 7. H. Bowringii, n. sp. (Pl. XIV. fig. 3.) Ovalis, convexus, haud parallelus, latus, sat rotundatus, puncta- tus, niger, flavo-maculatus : capite inter oculos superné un- dique impresso, flavo, basi laté transverse nigro ; thorace sub- tilissimé punctato, anticé punctis etiam majoribus sparso, flavo, margine basali nigro, ad medium latiori, margine frontali etiam nigro sed attenuatiori, et plerumque haud latera attingenti; elylris latis, sat rotundatis, subtilissimé punctatis, punctis etiam seriebus duabus ordinatis majoribus (serie externa aliquando obsoleta), nigris, vittis undique duabus maculaque flavis—vittarum hac media, inter strias 147 et 22”, lineari, cum suturad subparallela, et marginem juxta apicem penitus attinenti, ill4 marginali sed haud marginem attingenti, a humeris usque ad apicem producta—macula apud scutellum undique circulari insulari, inter suturam et striam 14": corpore subtus rufo-fusco ; pedibus rufo-flavis, femoribus pos- ticis rufo-fuscis ; antennis rufo-fuscis, articulorum basibus flavis. Long. corp. lin. 7—7; lat. lin, 44 —4. I received a single example of this species from the Gory Col- lection some years ago, taken in New Holland; more recently it has been taken by Mr. Diggles at Moreton Bay; and also on the coast of China by Mr. Adams, to whose great kindness I am in- debted for a fine series. It was taken also by Mr. Bowring, to whom I dedicate the species. In the cabinets of the British Museum, Dr. Schaum and the Rev. H. Clark. 8. H. decorus, Klug (Symbole Physicz, tab. xxxiii. fig. 5). (Pl. XIV. fig. 4.) The figure of this species had already been engraved for me by Mr. Robinson, when Dr. Schaum informed me of an admirable figure that already existed of it in Klug’s magnificent folio; the species, however, well deserves a repetition of figure, not only on account of the costliness of Klug’s work, but also of the extreme apparent rarity of the insect, as well as its beauty of coloration. The species is taken in Arabia. 9. H. Ussher, n. sp. (Pl. XIV. fig.2.) Ovalis, postice depressus, obscure undique bi-punctato-striatus, niger vel rufo-niger, maculis quibusdam flavis: capite flavo, ad basin laté et transversé fusco; thorace flavo, ad medium Le Genus Hydaticus. 215 (et praesertim apud basin) fiisco-adumbrato, basi ipsa usque ad margines tenuiter fusco-nigra; e/ytris subparallelis, sub- tiliter undique puncta in striis duabus ordinata disponuntur ; hee striee interdum penitus obsoletee sunt; ad suturam etiam rare puncta minuta serie ordinata apparent; elytra nigra vel fusco-nigra, margo autem usque ad apicem ipsum rufo-flavus, vitta etiam transversa flava ad basin (hee, forma eequali, tenuis nec suturam nec marginem attinet); tres alize macule undique apparent (nec forma distinctee nec omnino flav sed nigro-maculatz aut irrorate), 1™* apud marginem ante medium, haud vittam mediam attinet, nigro-mixta, sed ad marginem omnino flava, 24 pone medium vitta arcuata haud suturam attingit, figura ineequalis, nigro-maculata, 3* ad apicem plaga etiam flava haud suturam attinet; antennis flavis: corpore subtus rufo-fusco; pedibus rufo-flavis, fe- moribus posticis fuscis. Long. corp. lin. 7; lat. lin. 4-4. A very distinct and well-marked species, and quite unknown to Dr. Schaum (to whom I sent a specimen for examination), as well as to myself, until it was received by me from my friend Mr. Ussher from Cape Coast Castle in 1863; Mr. Ussher reported that after many months of severe drought, during which time every- thing had been dried up, the early rains left a small puddle of dirty fresh water, not much bigger than an ordinary hat; one- third water, two-thirds mud and slime. This single little hole was absolutely alive with water-beetles: upwards of 300 specimens were taken from it by Mr. Ussher, chiefly of one or two common species; but among them this, with three or four other novelties. I dedicate it to its captor, in recognition of his ardent love of Entomology, and of his hearty efforts to aid his brother naturalists by enriching their collections with African species. In the cabinets of Dr. Schaum and the Rev. H. Clark. 10. H. paganus, n. sp. Oblongo-oyalis, parallelus, punctorum tri-serie ornatus, niger, nitidus : capite levi, rufo, ad basin transverse nigro ; thorace haud ad basin sinuato, anticé excavato, rufo-flavo, ad medium subtiliter fusco-adumbrato, marginibusque antico et postico nigris (hoc ad medium latiori, illo transverso quali attenuato) ; elytris parallelis, sat productis, punctorum seriebus 3 (puncta intervailo distantia, haud profunda, et aliquando obsoleta RZ 216 Rev. H. Clark’s Votes on the sunt), quoad colorem nigris, humeris (macula parva anculata) marginibusque irregulariter testaceis vel rufo-flavis : corpore subtus fusco-nigro ; pedibus antennisque flavis, illorum femo- ribus tibiisque posticis fuscis. Long. corp. lia. 63; lat. lin. 33. Nearly allied to H. Capicola, Aubé (Spec. Gen. 196); but differing from it by its more parallel form and entirely rufo-flavous head and thorax; the elytra also, instead of being more or less flavous irrorated with black, are entirely black, the humeral angle being flavous, and also the line of margination, obscurely and in- terruptedly, but more distinctly flavous near the apex. I have received a single specimen from the Gold Coast, through Mr. 8. Stevens. 11. H.matruelis, n. sp. H, sobrino (Aubé) valde afiinis, sed elongatior, grandior, et notis distinctior; parallelo-ovalis, flavus, nigro-maculatus et irroratus: capite omnino flavo, margine basali tenuiter nigro ; thorace forma ut in H. sobrino, disco autem toto flavo; basi ad medium transversé et subtiliter nigra; elytris parallelis, lateribus vix rotundatis, subelongatis, punctorum seriebus 2 penitus obsoletis ; flavo-testaceis, maculis subtilibus circu- laribus confertis ornatis; he macule apud discum medium confluunt, ita ut vitta transversa lata plane apparet (anticé suffusa, ad marginem posteriorem distincté definita), apicem juxta etiam vitta attenuatior vix conspicua haud margines attinet ; margine ipso undique tenuiter flavo: corpore sublus rufo-fusco; pedibus rufo-fuscis ; antennis flavis. Long. corp. lin. 4}; lat. lin. 31. Sufficiently distinct from the Madagascarian H. sobrinus. In general form it is decidedly larger, as well as more parallel in outline, and more marked in coloration. The head, instead of being fuscous with divers flavous markings, is entirely flavous, with a black transverse margin (the same as in H. sobrinus) at the base. The thorax also is different in pattern; it too is entirely flavous, with a narrow basal margin of black, instead of being medially and broadly transversely black, without any such basal margin. The elytra are comparatively narrower and more parallel; and while the manner of coloration is the same in both (that is, a flavous ground irrorated with thickly-aspersed circular black spots, and these spots, by becoming confluent, forming two transverse bars of black, medial and apical), in the species before Genus LHydalicus. 217 us, by reason of the post-medial irroration being less heavy aud more sparingly distributed, these transverse bars are more clearly defined and obvious; in form they seem to agree the one with the other (the anterior margin is more or less suffused, and hence indistinct, while the posterior is more marked and more sharply defined; this posterior margin is obliquely transverse and wavy in outline, tending somewhat towards the apex as it approaches the suture ; the suture also between the transverse bars is narrowly black); the position, however, of the medial band differs from that in HZ. sobrinus, being medial rather than post-medial. I am indebted to my good friend Mr. Ussher, of the Com- missariat, for a fine series of this species, which he took at Cape Coast Castle, in West Africa. Upwards of 100 specimens are before me, which present no variety in form or degree of coloration. They all appeared suddenly after rains, in a locality where there had been previously no water at all, and where a short time after all traces of water entirely disappeared. 12. H. Leander, Rossi (Fn. Etrusce. i. 212). A species found in the south of Europe; and also, as it would seem, throughout the whole of Africa. Lucas reports it as found in Algeria, Aubé in Senegal, Boheman in Caffraria. In 1860 I received a series of a Hydaticus from Mr. Cuming from the White Nile, which I cannot but refer to this species: the question however is not without difficulty, for certainly there is a clearly- marked difference between my White Nile examples and the Caf- frarian type which I have received from M. Boheman, as well as the ordinary European form. The examples before me are con- siderably shorter and relatively broader than the South African, and a trifle shorter as well as much paler than the ordinary Eu- ropean exponents: the basal marking of the thorax, referred to in Aubé’s description and present in all other examples that have come before me, is absent in the White Nile specimens. I have not however sufficient evidence before me to warrant the erection of them into a separate species. 13. H. grammicus, Sturm (Germ. Fn, xiii. 1), I am unable to separate from this well-known European species certain examples of the genus which were taken by Mr. Adams near the coast of China, and by Mr. Wallace in the Eastern Archipelago. The insect would seem hence to have not only a broad but a very unusual range. It is reported by Aubé as also found in Armenia. 218 Rev. H. Clark’s Wotes on the 14. H. bivittatus, Lap. (Etud. Ent. 97). A species which, apparently confined to the South African region, is notable among its congeners (unless I am much mis- taken) for the aberrations of pattern and variation in size which it presents; its typical character is well described by Aubé (Spec. Gen. 207). I have an example from the Cape, in which a broad and well-defined transverse basal band connects the medial longitudinal marking with the scutellum; and another example from Ovampo Land, Lake N’Gami, resembling in all respects the typical pattern, but strangely aberrant in size, being only 52 instead of 7 lines in length. The species differs from H. vittatus of Fabricius, and also (if this species be really distinct) from H, 4-vittatus of Blanchard, in the relative position of its two marginal bands, which never approximate (as in the former), and never are abbreviated (as in the latter), but are continued, each parallel to the other, to the apex of the elytra. 15. H. stagnalis, Fab. (Syst. El. i. 265); Aubé (Spec. Gen. 201). This species would seem to have an extended range. Hitherto it has been known only in Europe, and as a rare species, but I have a single example, identical in all respects with the European form, from the Cape of Good Hope. 16. H. vittatus, Fab., var. (Pl. XIV. fig. 6.) Dr. Aubé (Spec. Gen. 208) points out the variation of pattern which occasionally is met with in this common eastern insect. I received from Mr. S. Stevens some years ago two ex- amples from North India, which, differing somewhat from each other, and also in some respects in puncturing from the usual type, present (as it seems to me) an additional and remarkable variety of pattern. Of the three rows of strie-like punctures on the elytra, one only is apparent ; and moreover there are certainly sparsely scattered punctures between the suture and the first stria which I cannot discover in any of the usual examples of H, vittatus, and which are not noticed in Aubé’s excellent descrip- tion. The peculiarity however of the variety before us consists in the form of the flavous band: it extends (as will be seen from the figure) from the margin to the region of the scutellum (the scutellum itself and a narrow border line of the elytra being black); it then narrows considerably (its inner boundary line crossing the first row of punctures obliquely), and is continued, parallel to the suture, as far as the apex; the outer boundary line leaves the Genus Hydaticus. 219 line of margination a little behind the shoulder; near the base a narrow longitudinal marking of black extends midway within the flavous band for about one-fifth of the length of the elytra. I agree with my friend Dr. Schaum that the form before us can only be viewed as an interesting and eccentric variety of H, vit- talus, although in a considerable series of examples of this com- mon species I possess no individuals which offer a connecting link between it and the normal pattern. 17. H. parallelus, n. sp. Oblongo-subovalis, parallelus, punctato - striatus, rufo-niger, nitidus: capite impunctato, fusco, ad apicem rufo, rufa etiam macula transversali brevi inter oculos (hee fortasse aliquando maculis duabus contiguis divisa est); ¢horace lateribus rotun- datis, anticé profundé excavato, basi subtiliter sinuato ; juxta Jatus anterius fossa transversalis punctis minutis ornatur; ad latera et basin versus rime longitudinales velut acuductz apparent; facies rufa vel rufo-brunnea, macula ad medium transversd nigro-fusca adumbrata; sculello triangulari, levi, nigro; elytris parallelis, subelongatis, seriebus 2 undique punctorum (punctis sparsis et minutis), fusco-rufis, ad latera rufo-irroratis, marginibus ipsis omnino rufis: corpore sublus fusco; antennis flavo-rufis ; pedibus flavo-rufis, posticis rufo- fuscis. Long. corp. lin. 63; lat. lin. 3}. I believe that this species is distinct from Hydaticus Capicola of Aubé, though the foregoing diagnosis will show that the two are closely allied ; and I am confirmed in this opinion by a note which I made some years ago, that the species before us was almost (probably quite) identical with a MS. species in the British Museum Collection, Fordii* (Brit. Mus. Cat. Hydrocan. p. 18). Now Fordiit (ranked, by the by, accidentally in the British Museum Catalogue as a Colymbetes, instead of a Hydaticus) was thus nained by Dr. Schaum as a new species when he had also before him H. Capicola, Aubé. I have thus his excellent authority for erecting it into a separate species. The insect before us is more parallel; it is also larger in size, and the elytra are completely fuscous-black, the sides only being narrowly sprinkled with rufous; not “ elytris rufo-testaceis, crebre nigro- irroratis,”’ as in Aubé’s description of his insect. The range of the habitat of H. parallelus is, however, open to * Unfortunately, in the Museum this species has been for the time mislaid. T am thus unable to verify my note by a second examination. I have no reason, however, to doubt its accuracy. 2205 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the somewhat greater difficulty. I have in my collection two examples almost identical in size and colouring, as well as in pattern; of these I received one from Mr. Stevens, from New South Wales, the history of the example being quite undoubted ; the other I obtained at the dispersion of the Entomological Society’s Collection in 1858, labelled Cape of Good Hope! It would naturally have been supposed that one of these labels must be incorrect. We have clear evidence, however, that H. Capicola, Aubé, originally from the Cape, is found at Moreton Bay (twice I have received examples from that locality); and if Capicola is common to both continents, H. parallelus may be well supposed to be common to both continents also. 18. H. nigro-marmoratus, n. sp. Oblongo-ovalis, depressiusculus, levis, rufo-testaceus, nigro- maculatus: capite rufo, ad basin transverse et ad interiorem oculorum marginem nigro; thorace lato, subtilissimé punc- tulato, anticé excavato (angulis anticis prominulis et acutis), ad basin sub-sinuato; quoad colorem rufo-testaceo, ad basin tenuiter nigro; scutello triangulari, levi, nigro; elytris sat latis et ad apicem sat acuminatis, undique seriebus punc- torum rarorum tribus distinctis ornatis, rufo-testaceis, sutura zequaliter et seriebus macularum 3 inequalibus nigris; he maculz sinuatee, longitudinaliter producte, interrupte, in vittis apud punctorum series elytra ornant, et puncta ipsa plerumque maculis minoribus circularibus cinguntur: corpore sublus tusco; pedibus flavis, tibiis posticis fuscis ; antennis flavis. Long. corp. lin. 6; lat. lin. 33. A single specimen of this fine African species I received for examination, through the kindness of my friend Mr. John Gray, when at Lisbon, from Dr. Bocage, the head of the National Museum. It was received by him from Angola. H. nigro-marmoratus will take its place near H. Dregii, which it generally resembles in*pattern; it is however abundantly dis- tinct: the sutural line is very evenly black; along the first row of punctures (which are distinct but widely separated) runs an un- even, irregular, longitudinal marking from the base to the apex (in some places broader than but for the most part about equal in breadth to the sutural marking); this is interrupted in front of the middle ; the second longitudinal marking is more irregular still, it is placed rather within the second line of punctures, is narrower Genus Hydaticus. 52 | than the first, and confluent with it near the base and apex; the punctures themselves (being on the outer side of this marking), and also the punctures of the third row, are each surrounded by a regular and circular marking; the third line of black coloration is between the second and third rows of punctures, and consists of three markings—one near the shoulder, which is confluent with the first at the base, one medial, which is shorter and more minute, and a third post-medial, which is much broader, extend- ing from the second row of punctures to the margination; at the medial margination there is also another fuscous marking. There is no other species of the genus known to me with which TT. nigro-marmoratus can be confounded. 19. H. fulvo-notatus, n. sp. Ovalis, depressus, nitidus, niger, fulvo-notatus: capite rufo, ad basin laié et transverse nigro; thorace anticé excavato, ad basin sinuato-rotundato, lateribus vix rotundatis, apicem versus transverse leviter punctato, nigro, lateribus Jate flavo-rufis; scute/lo triangulari, levi, nigro; elytris Jatis, subtilissimé punctatis, etiamque punctorum seriebus 3 nigris ; basi, fascia post-media, et apice rufo-flavis; basis fascia ornatur nec baseos marginem nec suturam attingenti, latiori ad latera, attenuatior! versus scutellum; fascia post-media interrupta est, latior ad marginem, deinde irregularis et angulata macula minori continuitur, macula secunda etiam minori suturam mediam approximat; apicem juxta sed haud attingens, macula latior ad marginem, attenuatior versus (sed neque pertingens) suturam ; margo quoque ipse flavus est : corpore subtus fusco ; pedibus rufo-fuscis, anticis flavis; an- tennis flavis. Long. corp. lin. 53; lat. lin. 34. I received two examples of this pretty species from my friend Mr. Ussher, who took them with other Hydatici during the short rainy season at Cape Coast Castle, in Western Africa. The species may easily be recognized by the three transverse fulvous markings on its dark-coloured elytra. 20. H. histrio, n. sp. (PI. XIV. fig. 5.) Ovalis, modicé attenuatus, modicé convexiusculus, niger, flavo- ornatus: capile flavo, ad basin laté et transverse nigro ; thorace nigro, ad latera late flavo; scutedlo triangulari, nigro; elytris subparallelis, punctorum seriecbus duabus undique 222 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the Genus Hydaticus. (punctis confertis, minutis, et ineequaliter dispositis), quoad colorem nigris, apud basin (sed baseos marginem haud om- nino attingens) macula subtriangularis ante medium elytrorum inter strias 14 et 24™ sese dirigit, vitta etiam marginalis a humeris propemodum apicem attingit: corpore subtus nigro ; pedibus flavis, posticis fuscis ; antennis flavis. Long. corp. lin. 6; lat. lin. 3. A distinct species from northern India, an example of which I received some years ago in the Gory Collection. It is allied to viltalus, Fab., but besides being of a pattern which it seems almost impossible to place as an extreme variety of that variable species, it is manifestly narrower and more constricted in form. 21. H. mgro-vitiatus, n. sp. Ovalis, convexiusculus, sat latus, et ad latera nonnihil rotun- datus: thorace leviter punctato et ad latera apud basin re- ticulato vel quasi irregulariter acuducto, quoad colorem testaceo-rufo, marginibus ad apicem et basin tenuiter nigris ; scutello triangulari, levi, nigro; elytris undique punctorum seriebus duabus (punctis raris et aliquando obsoletis), om- nino subtilissimé et crebré punctatis, testaceis vel rufo- testaceis; vitt& suturali alteraque (vel duabus approxima- tis) undique nigris; inter vittas et margines elytra quast nigro-irrorata maculis subtilissimis sparguntur; he maculae autem non confuse ageregate, sed plus minus ordinibus dispositze sunt: corpore subtus, pedibusque rufo-fuscis. Long. corp. lin. 5; lat. lin. 23. Allied to H. Leander of South Europe, and, at first sight, only a variety of that species. The only example that I have seen was received by Mr. Wallace from Japan, and is in my collection. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIV. Fig. 1. Hydaticus Bakewellii, Clark. Fig. 2. rp Ussherii, Clark. Fig. 3. oe Bowringii, Clark. Fig. 4. 45 decorus, Klug. Fig. 5. 5 histrio, Clark. Fig. 6, $3 vittutus, Fab., var. VIII. Descriptions of uncharacterized Genera and Species of Phytophaga. Bys. oe, DALY, [Read Ist August, 1864.] List of New Species. — . Lema gravida-ess+++» Port Natal = Clythra( Diapromorpha) Weatleri ccccese eseees Lambesi Clythra ( Pepluptera) LUDIANS sreietas ocicie ceo) Ort; Natal Doryphora Salvinii.... Panama Ceralces Walleri. »».. Zambesi spilota .... a os case Chrysomela (Atechna) ClaPKis as vecie See ee Australica (Stethomela) Parryi .. -- Australia Gonioctena Murrayi .. OldCalabar Fortwnei.es | NoEaat 11. Gustrolina thoracica... Japan 12. Lina Adamsii...... Chusan a” Ios ” foo) 9° 10. ” 13. Plagiodera celestina. .. HongKong | Lake LS N’Gami ” CUPYCE overs | 15. 16. 17. 18. 19: 20. Clitena (n.g.) limbata.. Siam », melancholica.. ,, F ‘ Northern Laphris(n.g.)emarginata i China Cerochroa maculicollis.. OldCalabar Letana (n.g.) histrio.. S. Africa Platyvantha(n.g.)apicalis Sumatra Java is Singapore Doridea (n.g.) insignis Tringanee Sumatra Sarawak 5 nigricornis ventralises 23. 24, Theopeu (n.g.) pulchella 25. elegantula ..e »,» Mouhoti...... Siam . Atysa (n.g.) terminalis Mysol 28. Alopena (n.g.) collaris NewGuinea 29. Calopepla Livingstonii. Zambesi 30. | 31. Mesomphalia Salvinii .. 32. Batonota Godmanii ..+. Dolichotoma Salvinii .. Panama »” Fam. CRIOCERIDE. Genus L EMA, Fab. Lema gravida. Robusta, fulva, nitida; antenni s (articulo basali excepto), thoracis puncto utrinque, elytrorum punctis sex, femoribus basi et apice, tibiis tarsisque nigris; thorace subquadrato, Jateribus modice constrictis, vix pone medium transversim sulcato, dorso antico bifoveolato et ibi subcrebre punctato; elytris ampliatis, thorace multo latioribus, convexis, fortiter punctato- striatis, striis sulcatis, interspatiis convexis, ad apicem costatis. Long. 4 lin. ; lat. elytr. 2 lin. Hab. Port Natal. Antenne slender, entirely filiform, half the length of the body. Thorax scarcely broader than Jong ; transverse sulcation impressed in the middle with a distinct fov ea, the rest of its surface covered with nearly obsolete transverse wrinkles; the two black spots are placed one on either side just behind the anterior angles. Elytra 224 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized broader with relation to the thorax than in any other species with which I am acquainted ; the usual depression below the basilar space wanting; the black spots, three on each elytron, are arranged as follows, viz., one on the humeral callus, the second just before the middle of the disk, rather nearer the suture than the outer ‘ border, and the third nearly half-way between the middle and the apex of the elytron, placed in the middle of the disk. Fam. CLYTHRID &, Genus Crytura, Fab. Clythra (Diapromorpha) Walleri. Elongata, cylindrica, postice paullo attenuata, nigra, subtus pube argentea adpressa dense vestita; tibiis tarsisque obscure fulvis ; thorace fortiter subcrebre punctato, apice lateribusque (illo medio interrupto) flavis; elytris grosse punctatis, utrisque plagé basali inter callum humerale et suturam posita, vitta marginali a basi ad medium ducta, ibi introrsum flexa et fasciam transversam ante suturam abbreviatam formante, maculisque duabus subapicalibus, oblique transversim positis, flavis. Long. 6 lin. Hab. Zambesi River. This species is most nearly allied to D. argentata; the thorax is rather less closely but more coarsely punctured, and the pattern both of thorax and elytra is different. Clythra (Peploptera) tibialis. Subconico-cylindrica, nitida, nigra, subtus cinereo-sericea; tibiis (basi exceptis) fulvis; thorace elytrisque obscure fulvis, illo levi, vitta lata nigra, his distincte punctatis, punctis confuse striatim dispositis, utrisque maculis quatuor, duabus ante medium oblique, duabus vix pone medium (exterior parva) transversim positis, nigris. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Port Natal. Head slightly concave and rugose-punctate between the eyes ; base of antennz fulvous, ‘Thorax very convex, smooth and im- punctate, with the exception of two or three small fovez on either side near the lateral margin; sides rounded and narrowed from base to apex. Scutellum broad, triangular, Elytra coarsely punctured, punctures near the suture arranged in irregular strizx. Or Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 22 Fam. CHRYSOMELIDE. Genus Doryrnora, Lllig. Doryphora Salvinir. Ovata, valde convexa, sordide fulva, nitida; elytris sat fortiter gemellato-punctato-striatis, flavis, vitta suturali vix ante apicem maculam parvam coeunte, limboque laterali angusto postice fere evanescente, rufo-fuscis ; utrisque maculis irregu- laribus novem, 1-3-3-2 positis, castaneis, instructis. Long. 6 lin. Hab. Panama. Head broad, finely punctured, upper portion of face irregularly but at the same time lightly excavated. Antenne slightly thickened towards their apex, terminal joints longer than broad. Thorax more than twice as broad as long, sides nearly straight and parallel, rounded and narrowed in front; apex deeply ex- cavated, the anterior angles subacute; above strongly punc- tured, the punctures being irregularly scattered over the surface. Elytra broader than the thorax, subparallel along the sides, their apex regularly rounded ; surface strongly punctured, the punctures being arranged in irregular gemellate striae: the chestnut patches on the disc of each elytron are arranged as follows, viz., one in the middle of the base, three transversely before the middle, three immediately behind the latter, and two others also placed trans- versely just before the apex. Mesosternal spine more than half the length of the metasternum. This new and beautiful species ought to be placed close to Doryphora nigroguttata, Stal. Genus Creratcegs, Gerst. Ceralces ferrugineus, Gerst. Some years ago I described in the Transactions of this Society (N.S. iv. 88) a species of Ceralces from Old Calabar, under the name of Pseudomela Murrayi; subsequently, on reading Ger- stacker’s description, and seeing also the figure of his insect in Peters’ Reise nach Mossambique, I concluded that the two species were identical, and that, from his name having the priority, mine must sink into a synonym. The arrival, however, of a specimen of C. ferrugineus in the Zambesi Collection which is now before me, enables me to show that the two insects, although closely allied, are really distinct, and present clear points of difference. 226 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized In C. ferrugineus the thorax is more convex, and, together with the head, more coarsely punctured ; the basal joints of the antennae, instead of being entirely red, as in C. Murrayi, are obscure rufo-piceous ; and the elytra are irregularly punctured over their whole surface. In C. Murrayi the elytra are irregularly punctured on the disk, but near the suture the punctures are arranged in longitudinal rows, the puncturing being also finer than in Gerstacker’s insect. Ceralces Walleri. Oblongo-ovata, convexa, rufo-fulva, nitida; antennis nigris, pectore, pedibus, antennarumque basi nigro-piceis; thorace elytris latitudine fere cequali, dorso leviter punctato, utrin- que unifoveolato; elytris subcrebre punctatis, punctis prope suturam subseriatim dispositis. Long. 45—5 lin. Hab. Zambesi River. Mouth nigro-piceous, epistome and vertex closely punctured ; lower portion of face just above the epistome impressed with three short longitudinal grooved lines. Thorax twice as broad as long, nearly as broad at the base as the elytra, sides rounded and narrowed from base to apex; disk somewhat distantly, sides rather more closely, punctured, The broad thorax at once distinguishes this species from either of the two mentioned above ; the punctuation of the thorax is also much finer, more especially on the disk. Ceralces spilota. Breviter ovata, convexa, fulva, nitida; antennis extrorsum, oculis, thoracis maculis tribus transversim dispositis, elytrorumque maculis octo, harum quatuor infra basim et quatuor vix pone medium positis, nigris; scutello nigro-piceo; thorace trans- verso, irregulariter punctato; elytris crebre punctatis, punctis prope suturam in seriebus gemellatis dispositis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Zambesi River. In form of thorax and body closely resembling C. Walleri; rather shorter, however, and stouter than that species. Head coarsely punctured. Thorax feebly excavated on either side the disk. The black patches on the elytra, which are arranged in two transverse rows, vary in my specimens somewhat in size, and it is probable that in some individuals they are considerably enlarged a OO Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 2a0 and cover a much greater portion of the elytra; in that case they would approach in pattern C. ornata, described by me from Lake N’Gami. The present species, however, is nearly twice the size of C. ornata, and much less coarsely punctured. Genus Curysometa, Auct. Chrysomela (Atechna) Clarkii. Ovato-rotundata, valde convexa, rufo-picea, nitida; pedibus obscurioribus ; antennis nigris, capite thoraceque obscure rufis ; elytris obscure rufo-violaceis, subfortiter punctato- striatis, interspatiis planis, subremote tenuiter punctatis ; utrisque pustulis rotundatis quatuor 2-2 oblique positis flavis. Long. 43 lin. | Hab. Zambesi River. This lovely insect, the finest of the known species of Atechna, is at once to be distinguished from all its congeners by its much greater size; I have named it after my friend the Rev. H. Clark, who is just now engaged on a monographic paper of the genus Atechna. The four spots on each elytron form two obliquely transverse rows on the disc; the first placed before, the second below the middle. Genus Austratica, Chevr. Australica (Stethomela) Parryi. Subquadrato-oblonga, parallela, valde convexa, cuprea, nitida, zeneo-micans, subtus cupreo-zenea; antennis basi pedibusque obscure rufo-fulvis, illis apice nigris ; elytris pone medium declivibus, apice angulatis, profunde punctatis, punctis in striis remote dispositis. Long. 45 lin. Hab. Australia. Head smooth, impressed just above the epistome with a few deep foveze. Clypeus fulvous, epistome fulvo-azneous. Thorax more than twice as broad as long, sides straight and nearly pa- rallel, narrowed and rounded in front; disk smooth, very minutely punctured, impressed here and there on the sides and hinder half with large deep punctures, which have a metallic green re- flexion. ‘The punctures on the elytra, also metallic green, are similar in size to those of the thorax; they are arranged in nine rows, being placed at somewhat irregular and distant intervals in each row; in this respect they approach the punctation of Stetho- 228 Mr. J.8. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized mela gibbosa, but the punctures in the present species are much smaller and also closer than in that insect; on the side just below the shoulder is a large deep somewhat transverse excavation. Genus GontocTEenA, Redt. Gonioctena Murray. Oblonga, valde convexa, subparallela, fulva, nitida; mandibularum apice oculisque nigris ; elytris castaneis, confuse punctatis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Old Calabar. Head somewhat closely punctured ; thorax twice as broad at the base as long, sides rounded and narrowed from base to apex ; apical margin obsoletely bisinuate ; upper surface subremotely but listinctly punctured. Scutellum semirotundate. Elytra irregu- Jarly punctured. ¢ Gonioctena Fortunei. Breviter oblongo-ovata, convexa, pallide fulva, nitida ; oculis mandibularumque apice nigris; thoracis maculis duabus elytrorumque singulorum maculis sex, piceis; elytris punctato- striatis, interspatiis subcrebre punctatis. Long. 23 lin. Hab. Northern China. Very nearly allied to Gonioctena nigroplagiata, but separated from that insect, in addition to the different number of spots on the elytra, by its shorter form, its pale scutellum, and more coarsely-punctured elytra. Genus Gastrozina, Baly. Gastrolina thoracica. Oblonga, depressa, zeneo-nigra, nitida; thoracis Jateribus flavis ; elytris fortiter subcrebre punctatis, interdum obsolete cos- tatis, nigro-czruleis aut purpureis, margine elevato levi, aeneo-nigro ; abdominis apice piceo. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Japan. This pretty species is perhaps only a local variety of Gastrolina depressa: it differs chiefly in the coloration of the thorax, which is in the present insect brassy-black with broad lateral margins ; this character is constant, without the slightest attempt at variation. The raised vittze, always more or less visible on the elytra of G. depressa, are usually obsolete in the present species. Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 229 Genus Lina, Redt. Lina Adamsit. Anguste oblonga, convexa, viridi- aut ceruleo-metallica, niti- dissima ; abdominis limbo, pedibus, thorace antennisque rufo- fulvis, his unguibusque extrorsum nigris; elytris subcrebre punctatis, viridi-zeneis aut ceruleis. Long. 4—5 lin. Hab. Chusan. This beautiful insect was collected in some abundance by Messrs. Bowring and A. Adams. After this latter gentleman I have named it, as a slight token for his exertions in obtaining, and liberality in dispersing, the Phytophagous Coleoptera of Japan and Mantchuria. In size this species approaches closely to Lina cuprea, but in sculpture and form of thorax, viz., in the absence of the thickened Jateral border, it resembles Lina enea. The totally different colora- tion will easily separate it from either insect. Genus PraciopEra, Redt. Plagiodera celestina. Late ovata, modice convexa, rufo-testacea, nitida; vertice an- tennisque extrorsum nigris; elytris tenuiter subcrebre punc- tatis, Cuprels. Long. 23 lin. Hab. Hong Kong. Collected by Mr. Bowring. Narrower and more ovate than P. cinctipennis ; the elytra also more closely punctured and wanting the pale lateral border. Plagiodera cuprea. Ovata, valde convexa, cuprea, nitida; thorace disco tenuiter, irreculariter, lateribus rude, subcrebre punctato; scutello levi; elytris confuse punctatis. Long. 43 lin. Hab. Lake N’Gami. Sides of thorax nearly straight and parallel behind, narrowed and rounded in front; scutellum semi-rotundate; elytra rather broader at their base than the thorax, their sides rounded. Fam. GALLERUCIDE. Genus CritEna. Corpus elongato-oblongum, convexum, opacum, supra pube brevissima vestitum. Caprut thorace insertum, perpendicu- VOL. 11, THIRD SERIES, PART i11.—Nov. 1864. S 230 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized lare ; antennis robustis, articulis 4° ad 11°™ modice dilatato- compressis ; oculis ovatis, integris; palporum maxillarium articulo ultimo conico, acuto. Thorax transversus, irregu- Jariter excavatus. /lytra thorace paullo latiora, parallela, convexa. Pedes modice robusti, simplices; cozis anticis fere perpendicularibus, contiguis ; femoribus posticis non incrassatis, tibiis posticis apice inermibus, unguiculis bifidis. Mesoster- num angustum, acutum. Type Clitena limbata. The dilated antenne at once separate this genus from Galleruca, near to which it must be placed. Clitena limbata. Subelongata, subparallela, fulva, subtus nitida; pedibus (femorum basi excepta) obscure eneis; antennis nigris; thorace elytrisque crebre punctatis, obscure eneis, sub- opacis, illo limbo vittAque lata centrali, his limbo angusto, fulvis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Pachybouri, Siam. Collected by the late M. Mouhot. Head coarsely punctured, front impressed by a longitudinal groove, which extends downwards as far as the apex of the epistome ; just below the upper margin of the eyes it is traversed by a deep transverse groove, either extremity of which curves downwards and runs parallel with the inner edge of the eye; on either side, placed immediately above the insertion of the antennae, is a smooth slightly-raised semi-lunate space, bounded above and outwardly by the transverse, within by the longitudinal, groove ; antenne more than two-thirds the length of the body; vertex marked with a large obscure viridi-zeneous patch. ‘Thorax twice as broad as long; sides nearly straight and parallel, narrowed and rounded in front, anterior angles produced into an obtuse tooth; surface rugose-punctate, impressed on either side with a short transverse excavation; middle of the disc impressed with a longitudinal groove, which extends from just behind the apical margin nearly to the base, its basal portion dilated. Elytra sub- parallel, scarcely dilated posteriorly, their:apex broadly rounded, very closely punctured, and clothed with short adpressed hairs ; on the surface of each elytron are three or four indistinct, nearly obsolete, raised vittae. Genera and Species of Phytophaga. (231 Clitena melancholica. Subelongata, convexa, nigra, subopaca; thorace rugoso, irregu- lariter excavato, elytris crebre punctatis, pube brevi adpressa concolori dense vestitis. Long. 51 lines, Hab. Laos, Siam. Head coarsely punctured, excavated on the front; antenne more than two-thirds the length of the body, sixth and following joints compressed and dilated, ninth, tenth and eleventh very short, decreasing in width. Thorax scarcely twice as broad as long, sides rounded at the base, nearly straight and subparallel along their middle, thence quickly narrowed to the apex, anterior angles thickened; surface irregular and excavated. Elytra subparallel in front, scarcely dilated posteriorly, much more finely punctured than the thorax. Genus Lapuris. Corpus oblongo-elongatum, convexum. Caput exsertum, facie perpendiculari; antennis modice robustis, filiformibus, arti- culo secundo brevissimo; palporum articulis duobus ultimis conjunctim ovatis. Jhorax transversus, dorso utrinque trans- versim sulcatus. Llytra oblonga, irregulariter punctata. Pedes modice robusti; coxis anticis fere contigws, perpen- dicularibus, femoribus posticis non incrassatis ; tibiis posticis apice spina brevi armatis, waguiculis appendiculatis. Meta- sternum antrorsum ultra coxas intermedias productum. Type Laphris emarginata. Nearly allied to Aplosonyx, separated by the appendiculated claws and produced metasternum. . Laphris emarginata. Oblongo-elongata, parallela, convexa, pallide fulva, nitida; oculis elytrorumque vitta lata, mox infra basin fere ad apicem extensa, extus sat profunde emarginata, nigris; antennis (basi excepta) fuscis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Northern China. Thorax nearly twice as broad as long, coarsely punctured, impressed in the middle of the base with a large fovea; sides nearly parallel, sinuate behind the middle, posterior angles pro- duced, the anterior angles thickened and rounded, very obtuse. Scutellum smooth, triangular. Elytra convex, their apex slightly $2 232 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Deseriptions of uncharacterized dehiscent, indistinctly impressed transversely below the basilar space, somewhat closely punctured. Genus Crrocuroa, Gerst. Cerochroa maculicollis. Elongata, convexa, nitida, subtus cum antennis nigra; capite, thorace, antennarum articulo basali, scutelloque sordide flavis, ore verticisque plaga pallide piceis; thoracis punctis quinque, 4-1 transversim positis, nigris ; elytris castaneis. Long. 6 lin. Hab. Old Calabar. Antenne longer, more slender, and less compressed than in any other known species of the genus; nearly half the length of the body. Thorax narrowed and slightly rounded from base to apex ; dise coarsely but subremotely punctured. Scutellum subtrigonate, distinctly punctured. Elytra somewhat closely punctured. Meta- sternum produced anteriorly into a strong spine, which reaches to the front edge of the anterior coxee. Extreme apex of abdomen obscure fulvous. Genus Lmwrana. Corpus subelongatum, convexum, non metallicum. Caput modice exsertum, perpendiculare ; oculis prominentibus, rotundato- ovatis, integris ; antennis corporis longitudini fere equalibus, $ robustis, ad apicem attenuatis, articulis 3-8 incrassato- dilatatis, 7-8 latitudine decrescentibus, 9-11 gracilibus, fili- formibus; 2 gracilibus, filiformibus; in utroque sexu articulis primo incrassato, secundo brevi. Thorax transversus, dorso impressus. Edytra thorace sat latiora, oblonga, postice paullo ampliata, convexa, confuse punctata. Pedes mediocres, ro- busti, simplices; coxis anticis erectis, contiguis ; femoribus posticis non incrassatis; ¢2bits posticis apice spina valida armatis; unguiculis bifidis. Prosternum obsoletum. Type Letana histrio. The spine at the apex of the hinder tibiae, the peculiar form of the antenne in the male, together with numerous other characters, separate this genus from Diamphidia and other allied forms. Letana histrio. Subelongata, postice paullo ampliata, convexa, pallide fulva, subnitida; oculis, antennis (harum articulis basalibus infra exceptis), pectore, pedibus, scutello, elytrisque nigris; his | Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 233 erebre punctatis, margine basali plagisque tribus, duabus transversim ante medium, tertia magna pone medium, super- ficiem fere amplectente, positis, pallide fulvis ; thorace punctis duobus fuscis notato. Var. A. Thoracis punctis fuscis obsoletis, elytrorum plagis inter se confluentibus. B. Elytris totis fulvis. C. g Abdomine nigro, disco obscure fulvo. Long. 4—43 lin. Hab. Port Natal. Epistome strongly raised into a longitudinal ridge between the insertion of the antennee; between the upper portion of the eyes extends a transverse groove, from the middle of which a longi- tudinal grooved line runs downwards to join the apex of the epistome ; on either side this medial line, and bounded above by the transverse groove, is a smooth, slightly raised, subtriangular space; vertex minutely but not closely punctured. Thorax trans- verse, nearly twice as broad as long; sides narrowly margined, nearly straight and parallel, slightly narrowed and rounded just behind the anterior angles; disc impressed on either side by a large deep fovea, surface finely punctured. Genus PLATYXANTHA. Corpus elongatum, depressum, non metallicum, nitidum. Caput exsertum, subelongatum, compressum, perpendiculare ; antennis robustis corpore brevioribus, aut filiformibus, aut api- cem versus perparum incrassatis, articulis duobus ultimis ( ¢ ) dilatatis, szepe diftormibus ; oculis modice prominentibus, in- tegris; mento a basi ad apicem angustato, subconico ; liguld elongata, 5-angulata; pa/pis prope apicem insertis, palporum maxillarium articulis duobus ultimis conjunctimovatis. Z'horax subquadratus, disco deplanato, leviter excavato, angulis anticis deflexis. lytra thorace latiora, modice convexa, dorso leviter depressa, parallela, confuse punctata. Pedes elongati, modice robusti; coxis crassis, erectis, contiguis; femoribus non incrassatis ; i2biis posticis apice non spinosis, intus vix ante apicem in processum validum productis; wnguiculis acute appendiculatis. Prosternum obsoletum. Mesosternum apice subacutum, integrum. Abdominis apice exserto. Type Platyxantha apicalis. This genus is one of the most remarkable in the whole group of Gallerucide. The peculiar depressed form of the head and 234 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized thorax, the dilated joints at the apex of the antennz, together with the peculiar lobe or process at the apex of the hinder tibie, will readily separate it at once from all other known genera. Although I possess three distinct species, all collected by Mr. Wallace, I unfortunately know apparently only the male sex. Platyxantha apicalis. Angustato-elongata, pallide fulva, nitida; antennarum articulis duobus ultimis, scutello, genubus, tibiis, tarsisque nigris. Long. 4 lin. Hab. Sumatra. Head flattened and strongly compressed, oblong-elongate ; epis- tome slightly thickened, triangular, truncate at the base, its sur- ; face smooth, the centre being traversed by a longitudinal ridge ; on the front, just above the insertion of the antenna, is a short per- pendicular groove, which is bounded above by a transverse im- pressed line; at the point of junction between the two is a single fovea. Antennee moderately robust; third and six follow- ing joints gradually decreasing in length, the ninth, tenth and eleventh joints moderately thickened, the tenth nearly equal in length to the ninth, the eleventh somewhat longer, its apex pointed; on the upper edge of each joint from the third to the ninth in- clusive is a raised ridge, this is replaced on the last two joints by an elevated, ovate, cup-like space. Thorax scarcely longer than broad ; sides nearly parallel, running slightly outwards from their base to beyond their middle, then curving slightly inwards to their apex ; upper surface deflexed on the sides, especially in front, remotely and finely punctured ; disc flattened and impressed with three large ill-defined fovea, the first larger than the others, broadly ovate and extending from the apex to below the middle, the two others smaller but more deeply impressed, placed trans- versely one on either side the hinder portion of the disc, just in front of the posterior margin. Scutellum triangular, its apex rounded. Elytra not depressed below the base, finely punctured. Hinder tibize produced on the inner edge, just before the apex, into a slightly curved lobiform process, the apex of which is armed with a small incurved tooth. Platyxantha nigricornis. Elongata, parallela, rufo-picea, nitida; capite thoraceque obscure fulvis; oculis, pedibus antennisque (articulo basali excepto) Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 235 nigris; harum articulis duobus ultimis magnis, valde in- crassatis, difformibus. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Java. Head as in the last species ; antennz very robust, joints in- creasing in thickness from the fourth to the ninth, fourth to the eighth inclusive short, slightly compressed, subtrigonate, fur- nished, as in P. apicalis, with an acute ridge on their inner edge ; ninth rather thicker, equal in length to the fourth; tenth and eleventh large, greatly thickened, nearly equal, forming conjointly more than a third of the whole length of the antenna, the inner surface of each deeply excavated, the excavations smooth and shining, the one on the tenth irregular and armed with two coarse teeth; terminal joint acute. Thorax more narrowed in front than in P. apicalis; surface smooth, impressed in front with a longitudinal groove, and on either side, behind the middle, with a broad transverse depression. Elytra very minutely punctured ; basilar space bounded below by a curved depression, Hinder tibize armed on the inner edge, just before the apex, with a curved styliform process. Platyxantha ventralis. Elongata, modice convexa, parallela, fulva, nitida; pedibus antennisque pallidioribus; harum articulis duobus ultimis crassis, intus excavatis, concoloribus; oculis abdomineque piceo-nigris. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Mount Ophir, Singapore. Head shorter than in either of the two preceding species ; fore- head less depressed, the part above the insertion of the antenne between the upper portion of the eyes occupied by two indistinctly- raised subquadrate spaces ; antennz intermediate in size between those of P. apicalis and nigricornis, joints coarsely punctured, third to the eighth nearly equal both in length and thickness, the ninth much shorter than the eighth, tenth and eleventh much thickened, together nearly equal in length to a third part of the whole antenna, the eleventh half as long again as the tenth, its apex acute, both joints deeply excavated on their inner sides. Thorax distinctly but finely punctured; disc impressed on either side behind the middle with an oblique fovea; sides nearly straight and parallel, narrowed just behind the anterior angles. Elytra distinctly punctured; basilar space bounded beneath and laterally 236 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized by acurved depression. Hinder tibize armed within, just before the apex, with a slightly curved styliform process. Genus Doripga. Corpus anguste oblongum, convexum, non metallicum, nitidum. Caput exsertum, facie perpendiculari; oculis prominulis, 1n- tegris; antennis g robustis, articulis 9-10 valde incrassatis, difformibus; @ minus robustis, filiformibus; menfo trans- verso-quadrato; palporum articulis duobus ultimis conjunc- tim ovatis. Thorax transverso-quadratus, dorso impressus. Elytra thorace latiora, subparallela, modice convexa, dorso subdepressa, seepe elevato-vittata, confuse punctata. Pedes robusti; coxis anticis crassis, erectis, fere contiguis ; femoribus posticis non incrassatis ; dibzs posticis g apice in processum acutum productis, @ simplicibus; ¢arsorwm anticorum arti- culo basali g valde dilatato ; wnguiculis appendiculatis. Pro- sternum fere obsoletum. Mesosternum apice non emargi- natum. Type Doridea insignis. Doridea is very closely allied to Platyxantha; they both agree in having a certain number of joints dilated in the antenne of the g, but in the present genus these joints are the ante-penultimate and penultimate, not the two ultimate as in the former; Doridea is also more robust and less depressed than Platyxantha. Doridea insignis. Subelongata, modice convexa, nitida, picea; pedibus antennisque obscure fulvis, antennarum articulis 9-10 sat dilatatis, com- pressis. fan Long. 33 lin. Hab. Tringanee. Head short, apex of epistome forming a perpendicular ridge, which passes upwards between the insertion of the antenne; front smooth, impressed with three small foveee, placed in a triangle on its surface, from the centre one a perpendicular groove runs down- wards to join the apex of the epistome. Antenne nearly as long as the body, robust; basal joint incrassate, curved, clavate, second short, third to the seventh cylindrical, each gradually thickened from base to apex, nearly equal in length, the third being rather longer than the others; all gradually increasing in width from the fourth to the eighth, this latter joint very short and transverse ; ninth and tenth largely dilated and thickened, irregular in shape, Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 237 compressed; eleventh slender, styliform. Thorax transverse- quadrate, sides nearly straight and parallel, obliquely narrowed just behind the anterior angles; above smooth and shining, dis- tantly punctured, impressed on either side, just behind the middle, with a large deep fovea; foveze more closely and coarsely punctured than the remainder of the surface. Scutellum triangular, its apex obtuse. Elytra broader than the thorax, subparallel; their apex obtuse, conjointly emarginate at the sutural angle, strongly but not coarsely punctured; the surface of each elytron with about eight indistinctly raised longitudinal vittee. Genus THEOPEA. Corpus elongatum, angustatum, parallelum, seepe metallicum. Caput exsertum, declive; antennis sat gracilibus, corpore vix brevioribus, articulis cylindricis; g subfusiformibus, articulis intermediis leviter incrassatis, cylindricis aut compressis ; @ subfiliformibus, ad apicem non aut vix attenuatis; ar- ticulo primo leviter curvato, paullo inerassato, secundo brevi, ceteris inter se fere eequalibus, singulatim primo brevioribus ; oculis ovatis, prominentibus, integris. Thoraa subquadratus, dorso impressus. lytra thorace paullo latiora, elongata, parallela, modice convexa, dorso subdepressa, punctato-striata, interspatiis alternis leviter costatis. Pedes graciles, elongati; coxis anticis erectis, contiguis; femoribus posticis non incras- satis ; ¢ibiis posticis apice inermibus; tarsorum posticorum articulo basali duobus sequentibus longiori; ungwculis ap- pendiculatis. Prosternum fere obsoletum. Mesosternum apice acutum. Type Theopea impressa, Fab. Theopea pulchella. Elongata, angustata, parallela, metallico-czerulea, nitida; an- tennis nigris, articulis apice albidis, articulis intermediis inter se longitudine equalibus; thorace profunde bi-impresso ; elytris costatis, interspatiis bifariam punctatis. Mas.—Antennarum articulis intermediis modice incrassatis, cylindricis. Foem.—Antennis subfiliformibus, ad apicem vix attenuatis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Sumatra. This species closely resembles 7. impressa, Fab.; in the present insect the intermediate joints of the antenne are cyliferical and 238 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized nearly equal in length; in impressa they are unequal, the sixth joint being elongate, and, together with the seventh, compressed. Theopea elegantula. Elongata, angustata, parallela, metallico-cerulea, nitida; an- tennarum apice albido; thorace fovea magna transversa an- tice bilobaté profunde impresso ; elytris costatis, interspatiis bifariam punctatis. Mas.—Antemarum articulis 7—9 paullo incrassatis, latitudine perparum decrescentibus, cylindricis. Foem.—Antennis subfiliformibus, ad apicem obsoletius atte- nuatis. Long. 2% lin. Hab. Sarawak. The different form of the dorsal impression on the thorax, together with the difference in the structure of the antennee in the male, will separate this insect from the preceding. Theopea Mouhoti. Elongata, angustata, parallela, subtus nigro-picea, supra san- guinea; antennis nigris; thoracis dorso utrinque profunde excavato; elytris costatis, interspatiis bifariam punctatis. Mas.—Antennarum articulis intermediis inter se fere aqualibus, modice dilatatis, cylindricis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Siam. Collected by the late M. Mouhot. Genus Arysa. Corpus elongatum, angustatum, parallelum, subopacum, non metallicum. Caput exsertum; antennis robustis, corporis Jongitudini eequalibus aut vix brevioribus, filiformibus, ad api- cem paullo attenuatis, articulo secundo brevi; oculis intevris, prominentibus, ovatis. J’horax transversus, dorso plano aut transversim concavo-excavato. Llytra thorace vix latiora, parallela, modice convexa, crebre punctata, pube brevissima adpressé vestita. Pedes subelongati, modice robusti, sim- plices; cowis anticis basi transversis, crassis, erectis, sub- contiguis; femoribus posticis non incrassatis, t2bus posticis muticis; wnguiculis appendiculatis. Prosternum angustis- simum. Type Alysa terminalis. The narrow parallel form will at once divide this genus from Galleruca and its allies. Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 239 Atysa terminalis. Elongata, angustata, nigra; thorace depresso, rude crebre punc- tato; elytris fulvis, crebre punctatis, tertio postico nigro- purpureis, Long. 3—4 lin. Hab. Mysol. Genus ALoPENA. Corpus elongato-ovatum, convexum, nitidum. Caput extrorsum subperpendiculare ; antennis corpore multo longioribus, gra- cilibus, articulis filiformibus, primo vix incrassato, curvato, secundo brevissimo, 3-4que utrisque articulo basali fere zequalibus, czeteris singulis paullo longioribus, 3-7 leviter curvatis; oculis prominentibus, integris. Thorax transversus, disco leevi, utrinque obsolete impresso. Elytra thorace paullo latiora, oblonga, subparallela, confuse punctata. Pedes sim- plices, graciles; cozis anticis crassis, erectis, contiguis; femo- ribus posticis non incrassatis; ¢ibiés posticis apice spina acuta armatis ; tarsorum posticorum articulo basali tribus sequen- tibus longiori; wnguiculis appendiculatis. Type Alopena collaris. This genus must stand close to Luperodes, Motsch.; it is sepa- rated by the long slender antennz, together with the longer third joints of the latter. Alopena collaris. Elongata, ovata, pallide fulva, nitida; oculis, antennis elytrisque nigris; abdomine, tibiis posticis apice, tarsisque piceis. Long. 2 lin. Hab. New Guinea. : Antennz more than half as long again as the body; face deeply excavated on either side between the eyes; epistome produced upwards as a longitudinal ridge between the insertion of the an- tenn; above the latter is a distinct transverse groove. Thorax smooth, impressed on either side the dise by a shallow fovea. Elytra closely punctured. Fam. CASSIDID. Genus Catorreria, Boh. Calopepla Livingstonii. Elongata, subparallela, modice convexa, dorso deplanata, subtus obscure nigro-picea; pedibus mgris, prosterno abdominisque 240 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized maculis obscure fulvis; -supra fulva, subnitida; antennis vertice elytrorumque margine basali nigris; thorace lateribus sinuatis, intra latera bifossulato, disco levi utrinque foveo- lato et ibi fusco-maculato; elytris profunde punctato-striatis, interstitiis elevato-reticulatis, interspatiis alternis modice carinatis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Zambesi. Collected by Mr. Waller. Thorax nearly as wide at its base as the elytra, quickly narrowed from base to apex; sides nearly straight, sinuate in their middle ; apical margin truncate, anterior angles scarcely produced, obtuse. The discovery of a species of the (hitherto considered) ex- clusively Indian genus Calopepla, in the southern portion of tropical Africa, is highly interesting, and, like the similar oc- currence of Sagra, Hopliondta, Aspidomorpha, and other genera common to the two countries, would seem to point to a former more intimate connexion between these two quarters of the globe, rendering it probable that in some former geological epoch a large connecting tract of now-submerged land existed in the Indian Ocean. In accordance with this view, the few known species of the genus (only four in number) found in such widely-distant localities, and agreeing so completely in generic characters, may be looked upon as the remnants of a much more numerous race, which formerly flourished in greater abundance on the now lost intermediate continent. An analogous case in the same family is to be found in the nearly allied genus Hoplionota, the species of which, according to Boheman, are exclusively confined, on the one hand, to Madagasear and southern Africa, on the other to India and the Malay Archipelago. Madagascar and Ceylon (both of which islands are probably remnants of the now lost land) contain more than two-thirds of the known species, the others (four in Africa and five or six in India and the Malay Archipelago) spreading in either case in a southerly direction on their respective con- tinents. The occurrence of so Jarge a proportion of the species in Madagascar and Ceylon would seem to show that the birthplace or metropolis of the genus formerly existed at some intermediate point, and that the species now living have spread themselves on either side from this common centre. It may however be argued that these various genera have migrated over both continents through Egypt, Arabia and Persia; the alteration of climate, the spread of sandy deserts, and other causes, having given rise to the gradual or sudden extinction of Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 241 species formerly living in great abundance in those portions of the globe: indeed, several species of Sagra are still existing in Abyssinia and northern India. But I think it may be shown that these species originally migrated northwards from the southern tropics, and not southwards from more northerly latitudes. The African and Asiatic species of Sagra present two well-marked types ; the species found in either continent bearing those peculiar characters which belong to their congeners of that quarter of the world to which they geographically belong. Now had the genus originally spread itself southwards from the northern tropics across the equator, the species inhabiting Abyssinia and northern India ought surely to present more points of similarity than those of the more southern latitudes, as being nearer the com- mon source from which the genus originally sprang; this, however, is not borne out by facts, the species inhabiting those countries being as distinct from each other, and bearing respectively the characters of the African or Asiatic types as strongly developed, as those found in Madagascar, India or Java. Genus Doricuotoma, Hope. Dolichotoma Salvinii. Rotundata, ¢ subtriangularis, @ convexa, obscure eenea, sub- nitida; elytris rude et profunde punctatis, elevato-reticulatis, antice retusis, modice transversim gibbosis, disci maculis plurimis margineque explanato-sanguineis, hoc sat dilatato, zeneo-limbato, disco maculis irregularibus eneis notato. Var. A.—Elytris sanguineis, sutura, limbo exteriori, maculis rugulisque disci zeneis. B.—Elytris disco toto eneo. Long. 7 lin. Hab. Panama. Collected by Mr. Salvin. Antenne ¢ longer than half the body. Thorax twice as broad as long, sides oblique, base deeply bisinuate on either side, medial lobe emarginate at its apex; surface opaque, centre of disc impressed with a longitudinal groove, which terminates anteriorly in a narrowed ridge; this last is continued onwards to the apical margin. Elytra much wider than the thorax, their lateral border broadly dilated; shoulders regularly rounded in the ¢, obliquely rounded in the ¢; sides rounded, gradually narrowed from their middle towards the apex, the latter obtuse ; dilated margin smooth, opaque, impunctate. 242 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of uncharacterized Genus Mesomrpnatta, Hope. Mesomphalia Salvinii. Subrotundata, modice convexa, viridi-metallica, subnitida, subtus nitida; thorace subtilissime punctato, lateribus a basi ad apicem rotundato- angustatis, margine antico fulvo; elytris dorso antico minus profunde—pone medium margineque sub- tilissime—punctatis, utrisque plaga transversa magna, antice emarginata, postice sinuata, fulva, zeneo-trinotata. Long. 5—6 lin. Hab. Panama. Extremely close to M. discoides, but at once to be distinguished from that insect by its much finer punctation; the elytra are also broader, their shoulders being more regularly rounded. Antennz equal in length to the thorax, black, four or five basal joints fulvous beneath. Thorax opaque, obsoletely punctured; sides less dilated than in M. discoides, being regularly narrowed and rounded from base to apex. Elytra g much broader than the thorax; sides broadly dilated, obliquely rotundate-ampliate at the shoulders, thence rotundate-angustate to the apex, the latter con- jointly subangulate; the fulvous patch on each elytron is placed transversely across the middle of the disc, extending from just within the lateral border nearly to the suture; its surface is marked with three small zneous spots, placed triangularly on its middle. Genus Batonota, Boh. Batonota Godmanit. Subtriangularis, convexa, obscure fulvo-fusca aut picea, sub- nitida; antennis (basi excepta) nigris; elytris viridibus, basi retusis, ante medium alte transversim gibbosis, confuse, prope suturam seriatim punctatis, disco laxe elevato- reticulatis, ad suturam bicarinatis; humeris antrorsum vix productis, acute angulatis, dorso carina obliqua instructis ; margine late explanato, fulvo, aneo-punctato, limbo toto zeneo. Long. 6 lin. Hab. Panama. Nearly allied to B. bivittipennis, Boh., to which species it bears the most striking resemblance in general form, sculpture and pattern of coloration; it may, however, be distinguished by the colour of the body, and still more easily by the form of the Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 243 gibbosity of the elytra, this part being much produced in the present species, and forming a short flattened spine; in bivitti- pennis, on the other hand, it is very short, and approaches more nearly to B. peregrina and other allied species. Thorax twice as broad as long; sides obliquely dilated, very slightly rounded ; surface opaque, obsoletely punctured, impressed along the base with four or five large fovez ; anterior half of the disc deeply excavated, leaving the medial line as a distinct longi- tudinal ridge. Scutellum smooth, impressed in the middle with a large deep fovea. ea Met aps Fi ay i is fi vy i ee Se on anne a ay ta a IX. Descriptions of New Species of Diurnal Lepidoptera. By W. C. Hewirson, F.L.S. [Read August Ist and September Sth, 1864. ] 1. Helcyra Hemina. (Pl. XV. fig. 1.) Male.—Upperside white. Anterior wing with the apex broadly black, marked with two white spots; two black spots at the end of the cell, and one near the anal angle of the same colour. Pos- terior wing with seven spots beyond the middle, a submarginal line, and the onter margin (which is very narrow) black. Underside lilac-white. Anterior wing spotless, with two indis- tinct lines of brown near the middle, and one scarcely seen near the anal angle. Posterior wing with the spots of the upperside and the submarginal line indistinctly marked in lilac, preceded by arches of rufous-brown; the black spot (the outer spot of three near the anal angle) crowned with bright yellow. Exp. 24%, inch. Hab. India. In the Collection of the British Museum. This adds a second species to Dr. Felder’s genus Helcyra, which he considers nearest to Apatura. It differs from the neigh- bouring genera in the rounded club of the antennae, which re- sembles dArgynnis and Callithea, It has the cells of both wings open. Inthe museumat Leyden this species is put with Charazes, to which it bears a general resemblance. Specimens are in the collection of Mr. Atkinson, of Calcutta, and Mr. Moore has shown me one from the Dublin Museum. 2. Limenitis Labotas. (Pl. XV. fig. 2.) Female.—Upperside dark brown. Both wings crossed obliquely at the middle by a common, straight, narrow, white band, broken into spots at its commencement on the anterior wing, followed between it and the outer margin by a band of black spots. An- terior wing with two crimson spots bordered with black, and a minute white spot within the cell; an indistinct white spot a little beyond the middle of the costal margin. Underside as above, except that itis altogether of a pale grey- VOL. Il, THIRD SERIES, PART III], —NOv, 1864, 7 246 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions of green, and that the black spots beyond the central band are much less distinct, some of them being nearly or entirely effaced. Exp. 33 inch, Hab. Menado. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 3. Limenitis Ligyes. (Pl. XV. figs. 3, 4.) Female.—Upperside dark brown. Both wings crossed by a _ nearly central band of white spots, followed between it and the outer margin by two bands of lunular black spots. Anterior wing with a black band, a rufous spot and a white band within the cell, and a rufous band at the end of the cell; three white spots near the apex. Posterior wing with rufous spots between the two submarginal bands of black spots. Underside ochreous-yellow. Anterior wing with the basal half rufous, the central band as above, the lower spots bordered with black ; a lunular white spot below the cell. Posterior wing (the central band excepted) immaculate. Exp. 23 inch. Hab. North India. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 4. Laogona Lilea. (Pl. XV. figs. 5, 6.) Male.—Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with a band from the base to beyond the middle, a minute spot at the apex, two spots below it (one nearly bipartite), a lunular spot (near the end of the first band), and a bifid band between it and the inner margin, all rufous-orange. Posterior wing with a spot before the middle and two spots on the ventral fold rufous. Underside ochreous-yellow, clouded with rufous-brown. Both wings crossed beyond the middle by a common rufous band. Posterior wing crossed near the base by a band of brown; tinted with lilac from the middle to the anal angle. Exp. 1-8, inch. Hab. East India. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 5. Gonepteryx Gobrias. (Pl. XVI. fig. 1.) Male.—Upperside bright yellow. Anterior wing with a large square apical black spot ; the outer margin with triangular black spots; a spot at the end of the cell and a transverse band beyond a a New Species of Diurnal Lepidoptera. 247 the middle (commencing at the black apical spot) orange. Pos- terior wing with a narrow margin of black, the fringe carmine. Underside pale yellow, the apical spot of the anterior wing rufous, tinted with lilac; the base of the costal margin carmine ; the spot at the end of the cell more distinct : the transverse band more distinct, continued half across the posterior wing. Female.—Nearly white. Exp. 27, inch. Hab. Borneo. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very closely allied to G. Verhuellii, from which it differs in wanting the acuminated apex of the anterior wing, and having the outer margin of the posterior wing black. G. Licorias of Doubleday does not differ from G. Verhuellii. 6. Eteona Eupolis. (Pl. XVI. fig. 2. Upperside dark brown, Anterior wing with a large spot within the cell, a second spot from the base parallel to the costal margin, and a third spot between two of the median nervules, rufous-orange ; a transverse band beyond the middle, with a minute spot beyond and near it, yellow. Posterior wing from the base to the middle rufous-yellow, rufous beyond the middle; the nervures and a broad outer margin dark brown. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that the apex is rufous, striated with black. Posterior wing rufous, with some pale yellow oblong spots near the costal margin; striated throughout longitudinally with dark brown, and between these striz towards the outer margin by lines of lilac-white. Exp. 24 inch. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Coliection of W. C. Hewitson. One species only of this genus has been hitherto described. It was originally placed by Boisduval with the Pieride in the genus Luterpe; Mr. Westwood ranged it with the Nymphalidae, next before Epicalia; and Dr. Felder has subsequently removed it to the Satyride@, near to Pronophila, with which genus it pos- sesses many characters in common, having the inflated costal nervure of the Satyride. This species is in the Museum at Vienna accompanied by a MS. name of Kollar’s, but I am sorry to say that I do not remember it. Tg 248 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions of 7. Eueides Eurysaces. (Pl. XVI. fig. 3.) Female.—Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with two transverse bands and a large trifid spot of transparent grey-white, (except near the base, which is yellow); a submarginal band of white spots most distinctly marked near the apex. Posterior wing with a broad, central, semi-transparent, transverse band of yellow (near the base) and grey; the nervures black : a white spot at the apex and a submarginal band of very indistinct white spots. Underside as above, except that it is paler and that the sub- marginal white spots are more distinct and in pairs. Exp. 2-8 inch. Hab. Quito. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Differs from all the other species of this genus by its transparent wings. 8. Dircenna Dercyllidas. (Pl. XVI. fig. 4.) Female.—Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing crossed by three bands of transparent white: the first bifid, commencing at the base and ending near the anal angle; the second beyond the middle hexafid; the third near the apex of two spots, the upper spot trifid. Posterior wing with the basal half, a small spot at the apex, and a submarginal macular band, transparent white. Underside as above, except that the dark brown of the upper- side is rufous, that the anterior wing has some indistinct grey spots near the apex and between the first and second transverse bands, and that the posterior wing has the base of the costal margin and three obleng spots, near it beyond its middle, grey. Exp. 2,9, inch. Hab. New Granada. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very interesting from its general resemblance to Caelenis Dido. 9. Lasiommata Lasus. (Pl. XVI. fig. 5.) Male.—Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with three short equidistant bands and a large trifid spot of pale rufous- yellow ; beyond these three black eye-like spots dotted with white and an indistinct submarginal rufous band. Posterior wing with a large spot near the costal margin, a large spot towards the anal angle marked by a black ocellus, and two small spots near the outer margin, all rufous. Underside as above, except that it is paler, that the posterior te a New Species of Diurnal Lepidoptera. 249 wing is undulated throughout with rufous-brown, and that it has two or three very minute eye-like spots, the ocellus of the upper- side being scarcely visible. Exp. 13 inch. Hab. Australia, particular locality unknown, In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson, Near L. Lathoniella of Westwood. 10. Lasiommata Leprea. (PI. XVI. figs. 6, 7.) Male.—Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with the basal half yellow, irrorated at the base with brown, marked in the cell by a black spot, crossed beyond the middle by a band of yellow. Posterior wing crossed at the middle by a curved band of yellow; the margins of both wings spotted with white. Underside. Both wings with the outer margins pale yellow with black spots, and above them conical spots of silvery white. Anterior wing as above (except the outer margin as just described). Posterior wing with the basal half silvery white: the base itself dark brown, followed before the middle by two spots and an angular curved band of dark brown, and beyond the middle by six blind black ocelli bordered with yellow. Exp. 13 inch, Hab. Australia, particular locality unknown. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. "ytih oats poe es im Polen, on ea ( 251 ) X. Further Descriptions of new Genera and Species of Phytopbaga. By J. S. Baty. [Read 3rd October, 1864. ] Fam. HISPIDE. Genus CHARISTENA. Corpus elongatum, angustatum, sepe filiforme, parallelum, sub- eylindricum. Caput inter oculos non productum, obtusum ; antennis subfiliformibus, inter partem inferiorem oculorum insertis, 1l-articulatis, articulis distinctis, quinque ultimis clavam gracilem sed distinctam formantibus ; epistomate brevi, basi elevata. Thorax subcylindricus, lateribus subrectis aut leviter rotundatis. Scutellum truncatum. Llytra thorace paullo latiora, elongata aut subelongata, lateribus rectis, parallelis, rarius minute serratis, apice rotundatis, semper serratis, angulis posticis obsoletis; supra convexa aut sub- cylindrica, utraque tricostata, interspatiis profunde bifariam punctatis. Pedes mediocres, modice robusti; ézbizs intermediis curvatis, apice in dentem brevem acutum introrsum productis ; tarsorum articulo basali duobus sequentibus angustiori ; unguiculis contiguis. Type Charistena ruficollis, Fab. This genus is nearly allied to Odontota ; its slender form, blunt head, distinct joints of antennez, and curved intermediate tibiz, are characters which taken conjointly will easily separate it from that genus. Sp. 1. Charistena rujficollis, Fabr. Syst. El. ii. 63; Oliv. Entom. vi. 778, pl. ii. fig. 34. Hab. Cayenne; Bahia. Var. A. Elytris utrisque linea longitudinali, postice abbreviata, fulva. : Collections of Rev. H. Clark, A. Fry, W. W. Saunders, and my own cabinet. This species is nearest, both in coloration and form, to Ch. Ariadne. In the present insect the base of the thorax is con- colorous with the disc, the general surface is also more coarsely punctured; the elytra are less’ cylindrical, being somewhat flattened above, and their coste more distinctly elevated; their apical margin is also more distinctly serrate. The much smaller size 252 Mr, J.S. Baly’s Further Descriptions of and entirely different colour will distinguish it from Ch. basalis, its narrower form from Ch. Lecontii, the different colour and form of thorax from Ch. nigrita, and its much narrower and more elon- gated shape from Ch. Pilate: and all the other species in the present paper. Sp. 2. Charistena nigrita, Oliv. Entom. vi. 778, pl. il. fig. 35. Hab. Carolina. In my own Collection and that of the Rev. H. Clark, to whom I am indebted for a specimen, Thorax distinctly longer than broad, sides slightly rounded, narrowed in front; surface very closely covered with large deep punctures, almost rugose ; base of thorax indistinctly depressed transversely, but without any trace of sulcation; apex of elytra minutely serrate. The entirely black colour, together with the shape of the thorax, at once separates this insect from its congeners. Sp. 3. Charistena Ariadne, Newm. The Entom. i. 77. ‘Nigra, prothorace tantum rubro: prothorax profunde punc- tus; utrumque elytron 3-carinatum, marginibus quoque elevatis ; interspatiis seriebus 2 punctorum profundorum im- impressis. Insectum longum (corp. long. °175 unce., lat. °05 unc.)” Hab. United States of North America. Mr. Newman has omitted to mention the black apical and basal margins of the thorax, which are very marked in the present species. I venture to correct his description, having one of his typical specimens in my own possession. I have reproduced his description entire from the “ Entomologist,” the latter being a book seldom to be met with. As stated under Ch. ruficollis, the more cylindrical body and coarsely punctured thorax will distinguish Ch. Ariadne from its allies. Collections of British Museum, Rev. H. Clark, and my own. Sp. 4. Charistena Lecontit. Elongata, tenuis, angustata, subcylindrica, dorso subdepressa, nigra, nitida; thorace transverso, lateribus rotundatis, ad apicem vix angustatis, dorso crebre profunde punctato, basi New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 253 transversim sulcato, disci medio vitta elevat4 instructo, rufo- fulvo, apice basique medio nigris; elytris apice minute serratis, lateribus minus rectis. Long. 23 lin. Hab. North America. Its larger size, broader and less cylindrical form, together with the transverse thorax, will distinguish this species from Ch, Ariadne, the other North American species with which it may be confounded ; the two strongly resemble each other in colour. Collection of Rev. H. Clark, and my own. Sp. 5. Charistena basalis. Elongata, filiformis, subcylindrica, nigra, nitida; thorace con- vexo, fulvo, basi transversim impresso, crebre profunde punctato, vitta centrali obsolete elevata, impunctata; elytris elongatis, parallelis, apice distincte serratis, cyaneis, utrisque plaga basali parva fulva. Long. 34 lin. : Hab. Amazons. Collected by Mr. H. W. Bates. Entirely similar in form to Ch. ruficollis, quite three times its size, its thorax rather longer and more convex; the apex of the elytra is however subacutely rounded. Collection of H. W. Bates, also in my own cabinet. Sp. 6. Charistena Deyrollei. Elongata, subcylindrica, dorso subdepressa, nigra, nitida; ely- tris nigro-czruleis ; thorace, femorum anticorum basi, elytro- rumque vitta lata laterali, vix pone medium abbreviata, pal- lide fulvis; thorace sat convexo, basi transversim depresso, profunde punctato. Long. 24 lin. Hab. Upper Amazons, Columbia. Elytra parallel, their apex finely but irregularly toothed. I have named this pretty species after my friend M. H. Dey- rolle of Paris, who is making a special study of the Phytophaga. Collections of H. Deyrolle, H. W. Bates, A. Fry, and my own cabinet. Sp. 7. Charistena bellula, Minus elongata, minus parallela, nigra, nitida; facie inferiori femorumque basi obscure fulvis; thorace vix transverso, leete rufo-fulvo, profunde sed subremote punctato, convexo, 254 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Further Descriptions of basi transversim depresso; elytris cyaneis, dorso depressis, apice minute serratis. Long. 12—2 lin. Hab. Bogota. Much shorter and proportionately broader than Ch. ruficollis, sides of elytra less straight than in that species; thorax as deeply but less closely punctured on the sides, depression at the base less deeply marked. Collections of H. Deyrolle, Rev. H. Clark, and my own. Sp. 8. Charistena elegantula. Minus elongata, angustata, subcylindrica, dorso subdepressa, rufo-fulva, nitida; corpore infra pedibusque nigro-variegatis ; oculis antennisque nigris; thorace latitudine vix longiori, lateribus fere rectis, ad apicem leniter angustatis ; dorso sub- cylindrico, profunde subremote punctato, spatio longitudinali centrali impunctato, basi transversim sulcata; elytris nigro- cyaneis, apice minute serrais, utrisque puncto apicali, prope suturam posito, fulvo. Long. 14 lin. Hab. New Granada. The different form of thorax, together with the different colo- ration, will separate this lovely species from Ch. bellula. Cabinet of Rev. H. Clark, also in my own Collection. Sp. 9. Charistena Pilatei. Minus elongata, parallela, subcylindrica, nigra, nitida ; thorace fulvo, apice piceo-marginato, dorso subgloboso, basi trans- versim sulcato, lateribus subremote disco remote punctato ; elytris cyaneis, parallelis, apice minute serratis, utrisque vitta fulva a basi apicem versus plus minusve extensa, instructis. Long. 2 lin. Hab. Teapa. Collected by the late M. Pilate. Rather longer, stouter and more parallel than Ch. bellula, to which species it is most nearly allied. Elytra parallel, their apex broadly rounded. The fulvous stripe on each elytron varies greatly in length, and occasionally is nearly obsolete ; the piceous apical border of the thorax is also sometimes very much narrowed and indistinct. In the cabinet of the Rev. H. Clark, also in my own Col- lection. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 255 Sp. 10. Charistena trilineata. * Subelongata, angustata, subcylindrica, dorso subdepressa, rufo- fulva, nitida; antennis (basi excepta) scutelloque nigris; elytrorum vitta suturali, alterdque laterali, hac ante apicem abbreviata, obscure cyaneis; vertice, thoracis lateribus an- guste, tibiarum apice tarsisque piceis; thorace rude punc- tato, basi non transversim depresso, disci medio obsolete longitudinaliter sulcato. Long. 14 lin. Hab. Yucatan. Thorax transversely convex, its sides parallel, slightly rounded ; elytra depressed along the suture, lateral and apical edges minutely but not closely serrate; apex of abdomen obscure fuscous. The more depressed form both of thorax and elytra will serve to separate this species from Ch. Pilatei. Collection of Rev. H. Clark, and my own. Genus METAXYCERA. Corpus obcuneiforme, dorso depressum. Caput inter oculos vix productum ; antennis 11-articulatis, rigidis, subfusiformi- bus, apice acutis, modice robustis, corporis dimidio brevi- oribus, articulis cylindricis, duobus basalibus brevibus, primo paullo incrassato, tertio modice elongato; oculis vix promi- nulis; mento oblongo, lateribus medio sinuatis. Thorax transversus ; lateribus pone medium fere rectis, antice angus- tatis, sinuatis ; angulo antico acuto, seepe dente parvo armato; dorso modice transversim convexo ; basi transversim depressa. Sculellum truncatum. Slytra thorace latiora, a basi ad apicem ampliata; apice obtuso aut rotundato, angulis pos- ticis obtusis aut rotundatis; anguste marginata, margine serrato; dorso depressa, utraque quadricostata, costa tertia minus distincta, interspatiis profunde bifariam punctatis. Pedes mediocres, modice robusti; larsorum articulo basali parvo; unguiculis contiguis. Abdomen sutura inter segmenta duo basalia ventris distincta. Type Metaxycera purpurata, Guér. This genus is (like the last) nearly allied to Odontota ; but although much more different in habit, it is more difficult to find good differential characters. It may, however, be separated by the slight prominence of the head in front, by the subfusiform cylindrical 11-jointed antennze, and the distinct sutural line be- 256 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Further Descriptions of tween the two basal segments of the ventral surface of the abdo- men; this line is usually obsolete or only indistinct in Odontota. Sp. 1. Metaxycera purpurata, Guér. Icon. du Régne Animal, Texte, p. 270. Hab. Brazil. This beautiful species is the most common of the genus, and found in most collections ; it is broader than any of the others, with the exception of M. rubroguttata, which insect approaches it very closely in form, but is less flattened above. Sp. 2. Metaxycera rubroguttata. Obcuneiformis, dorso depressa, late rufo-testacea, subnitida ; vertice postice, thoracisque plaga magna discoidali nigro- piceis; antennis elytrisque nigris, his a basi ad apicem perpa- rum ampliatis, apice rotundatis, utrisque margine humerali pustulisque quinque, harum tribus prope suturam, prima infra basim, secunda prope medium, tertiaque apicem versus, duabusque intra marginem exteriorem, prima infra humerum, secunda prope angulum posticum positis, rufo-testaceis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Amazons. The four hinder spots on each elytron are confluent in pairs, and form two oblique fascize on the disc ; thorax transverse, sides nearly straight and parallel behind, obliquely narrowed in frout ; upper surface irregularly excavated, opaque, irregularly but not closely punctured, middle of disc with an indistinct longitudinal groove; scutellum black, its apex rufous. This species closely resembles in form AI. purpurata, Guér. ; it is, however, less depressed, less coarsely punctured, more regu- larly rounded both at the hinder angles and apex, and the arrange- ment of the spots on the elytra is different. Unique in my own Collection. Sp. 3. Metaxycera trimaculata, Oliv. (Hispa), Entom., vi. 761, pl. i. fig. 5. Hab. Cayenne. Olivier describes this species as having a black scutellum; it varies, however, greatly in this respect, some specimens having the scutellum more or less stained with rufous, others entirely red. Collection of Rev. H. Clark, and my own. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 257 Sp. 4. Metaxycera Amazona. Anguste obcuneiformis, dorso depressa, rufo-testacea, nitida, supra subnitida ; antennis, vertice, thoracisque lateribus nigris; elytris obscure nigro-zneis, apice obtusis, utrisque vitta lata discoidali, a basi ad paullo pone medium extensa, plerumque apice extrorsum ampliata, fasciaque lata pone medium, ex- trorsum abbreviata, postice recte truncata aut concava, antice convexa, rufo-testaceis. Var. A. Vertice thoracisque lateribus rufis ; elytris nigris, ut in typo maculatis. Long. 4 lin. Hab. Amazons. Collected by Mr. H. W. Bates. Sides of thorax straight and parallel behind the middle, obliquely converging from the middle to the apex, and forming an obtuse angle with the hinder half; surface coarsely punctured, punctures crowded on the sides, more distant on the disc, the latter impressed with a broad longitudinal groove, which terminates behind at a transverse depression in front of the basal margin. This species is very closely allied to M. trimaculata, Oliv. It may be, however, distinguished from that insect by the following cha- racters : in M. Amazona the thorax is broader and more distinetly angled on the sides, the longitudinal groove on its upper surface being broader and very deeply impressed ;_ the scutellum is always red; the elytra are rather less coarsely punctured and more opaque, the costze being also somewhat narrower; the transverse rufous patch is placed at a greater distance from the apex of the elytra, is broader, and has its front edge strongly rounded, its hinder border being either truncate or slightly concave. In M. tri- maculata the antennz are rather more robust; the thorax is narrower (in some specimens almost conic), less distinctly angled on the sides, the upper surface less flattened, the longitudinal groove, although visible, being also much narrower and less deeply impressed; the scutellum is usually black, rarely wholly or in part rufous; the elytra are more coarsely punctured, the coste being broader and more nitidous; the longitudinal rufous vitta is narrower, its hinder half not dilated towards the outer margin; it is also usually interrupted in the middle to form two linear patches; the subapical transverse patch is narrow, and placed much nearer the apex of the elytra, its anterior border, instead of being rounded, is nearly straight and bisinuate, and its hinder margin is either straight or very slightly convex. Collection of Mr. Bates, and my own. 258 Mr. J. S. Baly’s /urther Descriptions, Sc. Sp. 5. Metaxycera sexpustulata. Anguste obcuneiformis, dorso depressa, rufo-testacea, nitida, supra subnitida; antennis elytrisque nigris, his subparallelis, apicem versus leniter ampliatis, apice rotundatis, utrisque pustulis tribus, una basali oblonga obliqua, secunda prope medium subquadrata, tertidque ante apicem, transvers4, communi, fasciam transversam postice bisemarginatam for- mante, rufo-testaceis ; unguiculis piceis. Long. 33—4§ lin. Hab. Upper Amazons. Thorax opaque, irregularly depressed and excavated, middle of dise with an indistinct longitudinal groove, transverse impression in front of base well marked, surface coarsely but not very closely punctured, sides of thorax nearly straight and produced obliquely outwards behind the middle, thence obliquely narrowed to the apex. The rounded apex of the elytra separates this species from M. trimaculata and Amazona, the only insects with which it can be confounded. Collection of Mr. Bates, and my own. ( 259 ) XI. Notes on the Genus Schematiza (Phytophaga, Galle- rucide), with Descriptions of New Species. By the Rev. Hamer Crark, M.A., F.LS., V.-P. Ent. Soc. {Read September Sth, 1864. ] Tue South American genus Schematiza contains within it species that vary considerably among each other in form and sculpture. Some (and these the most striking in size and beauty) have deeply costate elytra; others have their elytra perfectly plain: some are broadly dilated towards their apex ; others have the sides of their elytra parallel. The species are for the most part coloured with irregular flavous bands, and may be at once separated from other Gallerucide by their sufficiently short and broadly dilated antennz: this dilatation is not irregular or con- fined to one or two articulations, but gradually progressive from the first and also from the apical joints towards the middle. In form the species are more or less elongate and depressed ; not subcylindrical, as in Adimonia and Galleruca. The following diagnosis will suffice to point out the limits of the genus. ScuematizA (Chev.) Corporis forma vel oblongo-ovalis (versus apicem plus minus dilatata), vel parallela; depressa, pube tenuissima satis vestita. Palpi maxillares articulo ultimo dilatato, et ad apicem acu- minato, plerumque ut in genere Adimonia, Antenne robuste ; in quibusdam speciebus versus apicem subproducte, sed semper ad medium dilatate ; hac dilatatione ab articulo basali etiamque ab 11™° vel 10™° sensim et paulatim aucta ; articuli compressi aliquando, et aliquando subcylindrici; art. 3ts longitudine primum (ad apicem dilatatum) superat. Caput penitus verticale, vix porrectum. Thorax transversus, depressus, plerumque marginibus subelevatis, ita ut discus totus excavatus videtur, Llytra plerumque costata (costis latis etiamque profundis, sed haud apicem attingentibus), aliquando autem plana et sublevigata. Pedes robusti, unguiculi vel appendiculati (ut in S. Lycotdes) vel undique bifidi, ita ut quadri-unguiculate species apparent (ut in S. Hispiformi, et presertim in S. flavofasciatd). 260 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the § A. Species elytris apice rotundatis. a. Elytris costatis. [Sp. 1—10.] b. Elytris planis. [Sp. 11—14.] § B. Species elytris apice emarginatis. [Sp. 15, 16.] In order that I might be supplied with as much material as possible in my examination of the genus, my friend Mr. Baly has liberally placed in my hands the whole of the species in his collection. I have not, however, accepted his kind suggestion that I should describe the uniques which that collection contains ; it is better that these should be left to be described by himself at some future day, for this simple reason, which I deem to be not only important but of general application :—such is the multiplication of species that are becoming known to us, and such therefore the difficulty of accurately describing them, that typical specimens, on which descriptions are based, become of greater importance than ever; and hence I venture to believe that every worker will specially desire to have always within his reach the materials on which his own work has been based ; in the case of monographs this difficulty must of course be accepted as unavoidable; it seems, however, to my mind that it is better to avoid it when possible. It will be seen that I have omitted to notice certain manuscript names in Dejean’s Catalogue: I have done so with regret, but I can ascertain nothing with certainty respecting them. § A. Species elytris apice rotundatis. a. Elytris costatis. 1. S. Lycotdes, Guér. (Cuv. Regne Anim. Ins. p. 303.) Oblongo-ovalis, ad apicem rotundata, depressa, costata, sub- tiliter et crebre variolata, flava, nigro-notata: caput variolatum, nigrum; thorax transversus (ad apicem modice excavatus, lateribus antice rotundatis et basi transversa) depressus, et ad margines Jaté sed haud profunde exfossus; quoad colorem latera Jate flava sunt, discus medius nigrescit; scutellum tri- angulare, nigrum; elytra modice post medium ampliora costas quinque continent, una suturalis et communis, altera marginalis, tres quoque intervallo zequali mediz haud apicem attinent; costee exstantes, sed praecipue sublateralis pro- minens versus humeros exstat; quoad colorem elytra flava sunt, vitta abbreviata apud scutellum et apice laté nigris ; vitta abbreviata inter suturam et costam 24™ longitudine elytri dimidium haud equat; apex quoque quoad partem Genus Schematiza. 261 tertiam elytrorum nigrescit ; antenne satis elongate et late, nigree ; ita quoque pedes et corpus inferius. Long. corp. lin. 6—53 ; lat. lin. 3—23. It is probable that 8. Lycoides is subject to some variation of pattern in the anterior part of the elytra: in one of the examples before me there is a trace of dark colouring between the 2nd and 3rd costa, and also again near the margination; even, however, should the anterior part be in any examples entirely dark, the difference of the form of the elytra, which are more parallel, or rather less broadly rounded behind the middle, will abundantly separate this from the following species. In the Collections of Mr. Baly and the Rev. H. Clark. The insect is taken in Brazil. 2. S. amplicornis, n. sp. Lata, undique quinque-costata, subtiliter granulata, nigra, fascia flava media: caput subtiliter granulatum, nigrum; thorax de- pressus, laté transversus, antice modice excavatus, ad latera rotundatus, et apicem versus contractus; margo basalis trans- versus est; apud latera thorax longitudinaliter laté et haud profundé excavatur, hac fovea undique flava est, disco medio corrugato et nigro ; scuteldum triangulare est, colore nigrum; elytra versus medium rotundato-ampliata, ad apicem rotundata (vix dehiscentia), depressa et apud apicem declivia, ad hume- ros thorace paululum latiora, gradatim ad post medium ampli- antur; in utroque elytro coste quinque apparent, una com- munis suturalis, una marginalis, tresque aliae mediz intervallis zequis, his haud apicem attingentibus, sed costis 2 et 3 juxta apicem sese attingentibus ; marginatio undique ad apicem laté ampliatur ; quoad faciem elytra leviter et seepissime punctis confertis ornantur (punctis haud profundis et inordinatis), quoad colorem nigrescunt, humeris anguste flavis, fascidque media lata transversa flava ; hujus fascize margines anterior et pos- terior inaquales in intervallis singulis costarum subcirculares deflectuntur; antenne robuste sunt et nigra, articulis ad medium antennarum valde ampliatis ; pedes et corpus infra nigrescunt. Long. corp. lin. 6; lat. lin. 33. S. amplicornis differs from S$. Lycoides in being broader and less parallel as well as different in coloration; its much larger size will distinguish it from all other species of the genus before me. I have a single specimen from the Chevrolat Collection, re- ceived by M. Chevrolat from Brazil. VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART I1I.—NOV. 1864. U 262 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the 3. S. vicina, n. sp. Oblongo-ovalis, apice rotundata, elytris paulum dehiscentibus, flava, nigro-maculata: caput nigrum; thorax transversus, lateribus rotundatis sed haud ad apicem coarctis, margine antico paulum excavato, basi transversa, angulis posticis subrotundatis, sculptura ut in speciebus preecedentibus ; scutellum subcordatum, nigrum; elyira ad humeros thorace sublatiora, et deinde gradatim ampliora; a basi ad apicis regionem sunt sulci quatuor profundi lati, interstitiis rotun- datis ; horum externus profundissimus est post humeros, su- turalis et 24'S gequales, paralleli, tertius (minor subobsoletus) inter 2" et marginalem vix apparet; quoad colorem, elytra flava (pube densa et tenui flava vestita), vitta abbreviata ad suturam et basi laté nigris ; vitta abbreviata a sutura usque ad suleum primum minus quam elytrorum dimidium occupat ; apex quoque laté niger est ; antenn@ incrassatz, nigre ; pedes corpusque subtus quoque nigri. Long. corp. lin. 43; lat. lin. 2. S. vicina differs entirely from the preceding species by the sculpture of the elytra, although the mere patterns are in some degree similar ; instead of sharply defined and narrow ridges we have here rather longitudinal depressions, the intervals being rounded off; the flavous coloration of the insect is formed by very close and fine pubescence; the sutural marking of the elytra between the suture and the first channel extends nearly half-way to the apex, the medial termination of it being not abruptly transverse, but pointed; between this marking and the shoulders there are traces of other markings also, suggesting the possibility of the whole anterior part of the elytra being fuscous: the apical marking broadly extends from the margination to the suture, its upper margin being obliquely circular; the boundary line at the suture is at the distance of one-fifth of the whole elytra, and from that point extends in a generally semicircular direction till it reaches the margination at about the same distance from the apex. The form also (as well as the sculpture, and to some degree the pattern) of S. vicina differs from that of the preceding species; it is (being a much smaller insect) more parallel, more attenuate ; the sides of the elytra being manifestly more rounded. I have a single specimen from La Ferté’s Collection, received from Brazil ; in the Collection also of Mr. Baly. Genus Schematiza. 263 4. S. equinociialis, n. sp. Oblongo-ovalis, subparallela, leviter canaliculata, flava, nigro- ornata: caput nigrum apparet, labro etiamque in fronte macula insulata flavis; ad frontem fovea est media obsoleta, a basi usque ad antennarum basin; thorax transversus est, latitudine (ad medium) vix duplo longitudine majori; apex modice excavatus est, basis transversa, Jatera rotundata et haud apicem versus constricta; sculptura ut in specie prace- denti; undiqne laté depressus (ad medium fovea longitu- dinalis apparet); quoad colorem niger, lateribus undique laté etiamque vitta media flavis; scutedlum rotundato-triangu- lare, pube densa flava vestitum; elylra subparallela, thorace paululum Jatiora, apice rotundata (elytrorum apicibus vix dehiscentibus); juxta suturam carina haud apicem attingens patet, et altera a humeris vix ad medium extendit; quoad colorem fascia media nigra (ad basin vitté communi nigra juncta) etiamque apex laté niger elytra flava ornant; an- tenne robust, nigre ; pedes nigri, femorum basibus fusco- adumbratis ; abdomen corpusque subtus nigra. Long. corp. lin. 4; Jat. lin. 12. This beautiful species is allied to S. vicina, but is readily separated from it by its different sculpture, as well as by its pattern of colours. I have a single specimen in my Collection received from Columbia. 5. S. venusta, n. sp. Oblengo-ovalis, subparallela, leviter costata, nigra, flavo-ornata ; caput ad medium foveolatum, nigrum; thorax transversus, latitudine vix duplo longitudinem superans, lateribus ro- tundatis, flavus, vittis duabus latis nigris mediis, parallelis ; scutellum semicirculare, nigro-fuscum ; elytra subparallela, elongata, leviter costata, nigra, fascia media ineequaliter mar- ginata, macula ad humeros longitudinali, alteraque apud scu- tellum minori, communi, flavis: corpus subtus, pedes et an- tenne nigri. Long. corp. lin. 33; lat. lin. 14. Of the same size and generally of the same pattern as S. equi- noctialis ; it differs however from that species by its less distinctly marked costa on the elytra, as well as by the difference of details of coloration: the two thoracic vitte are broader, the humeral flavous markings are much smaller, and the flavous fascia of the elytra is medial, and not, as in S, @quinoctialis, post- uz 264 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the medial; in size also this fascia is narrower and not quite so irregularly wavy in form. From the Amazon district ; collected by Mr. Bates. In the Collections of Mr. Baly and the Rev. H. Clark. 6. S.frenata, Guér. (Cuv. Réegne An. Ins. p. 304). Oblongo-ovalis, subparailela, costata, flava, lineis duabus a capite ad elytrorum medium fasciaque lata media nigris ; caput omnino nigrum; ¢horawv transversus, lateribus sinuato- rotundatis, apice subemarginato, basi transversa, anguli antici et preesertim postici rotundantur, ad medium fovea obsoleta vix apparet; thorax flavus est, lineis duabus sub- mediis et parum obliquis a capite ad basin nigris; scutellum sat magnum, flavum; elytra thorace latiora, subparellela, ad apicem rotundata (apicibus singulis apud suturam haud de- hiscentibus); costee duze (versus suturam) alteraeque duz penitus obsoletze (versus marginem) apparent; he haud apicem attingunt; quoad colorem elytra flava sunt, fascia transversd post-medid JatA Jineisque duabus inter costas 1 et 2 nigris ; antenne, pedes corpusque subtus nigri. Long. corp. lin. 44—3} ; lat. lin. 23-13. I can trace no tendency to variation among the three specimens before me; the medial, or rather somewhat post-medial fascia is on its upper margin transverse, on its lower arcuate, being much broader at the suture than at the margination (both boundary lines being interrupted by the different costa, and irregular) ; the breadth of the fascia at the suture is about one-third of the whole length of the elytra. The species is found in Columbia. In the Collections of Mr. W. Wilson Saunders and the Rev. H. Clark. Schematiza dimidiata, Guér. (Cuv. Regne An. Ins. p. 303), Is described by Guérin as from Dory, New Guinea, and placed by him next to S. frenata. I do not recognise the description, but whatever the species may be, it can hardly belong to the genus before us, which is exclusively South American. 7. S. flavofasciata, Guér. (Cuv. Réegne An. Ins. p. 304), Ovalis, subparallela, leviter costata, nigra, thoracis lateribus et elytrorum vitta media flavis: caput nigrum: thorax trans- versus, depressus, latera subrotundata apicem versus paulum Genus Schematiza. 265 coarctantur; margines anterior et posterior ambo recti et transversi sunt; ad latera undique laté depressio fit; thorax niger est, lateribus (et interdum linea media obsoleta) flavis; scutellum nigrum; elytra subparallela, thorace latiora, humeris sat exstantibus, ad apicem rotundata, et haud ad suturam dehiscentia; undique 3 vel 4 sulci apparent, haud profundi, interdum obsoleti, haud apicem attingentes ; quoad colorem elytra nigra sunt, ad humeros autem macula minuta, etad medium fascia lata transversa, ad margines attingens, flavee sunt; antenne robuste, nigre; pedes et corpus sub- tus nigri. Long. corp. lin. 34; lat. lin. 13. S. flavofusciata differs from S. linealicollis (post, p. 266), by its much greater breadth, its broader fascia, and its less distinctly- marked costz on the elytra, as well as by the markings on the thorax ; it is much smaller, and comparatively broader than S. vicina (ante, p. 262). The fascia of the elytron is transverse both at its superior and inferior margin, not oblique as in S. frenata ; the line of margination is, however, not straight, but sinuate. A form, which I take to be a variety of this species, is rather narrower in breadth, and has the humeral marking continued broadly to the medial fascia, the fascia itself being much more irregular in outline; it may be indeed that this will prove to be a separate species. I took several specimens of S. flavofasciata when at Petropolis, near Rio Janeiro, with Mr. J. Gray, in February, 1857, and also at the same place specimens of the variety. In the Collections of Mr. Wilson Saunders, Mr. Baly and the Rev. H. Clark. 8. S. preusta, n. sp. Elongata, subparallela, costata, flavo-fulva, elytro singulo ad apicem rotundato, apice tenuiter nigro: caput nigrum; thorax modice transversus, depressus, latera sinuato-rotundata, mar- gines autem anterior et posterior recti et transversi; thorax undique ad margines laté excavatus est; quoad colorem flavo-fulvus, macula media insulari nigro-fusca; scutellum flavo-fuscum ; elytra paulum thorace latiora elongata sunt et sat parallela; humeri vix exstant; inter suturam et marginem coste tres apparent, una media, major, et undique altera minor, interdum obsoleta; he tres nec apicem attingunt; elytra favo-fulva sunt, apex autem tenuiter fuscus est, ita et 266 Rev. H. Clark’s Notes on the basis (obsolete) prope scutellum; antenneé valde inerassate, apicem versus tenuiores, nigrae: corpus subtus pedesque nigri, horum femora (ad basin) flavo adumbrantur. Long. corp. lin. 33; lat. lin. 13. More narrow and elongate than its congeners, and, moreover, notable by its pale fulvous colour, the apex of the elytra only and the medial dise of the thorax alone being black. I have two examples of the species before me, which differ in no respect from each other; one from Buenos Ayres, from M. Chevrolat, and the other from South Brazil, from M. Reiche’s Collection. 9. S. lineaticollis, n. sp. Elongato- et sub-ovalis, vix costata, nigra, flavo-ornata : capué nigrum, ad apicem rufo-flavum ; thorax transversus, lateribus rotundatis et subsinuatis, transverse depressus, flavus, vitta undique nigra, equali, a margine anteriori usque ad basin pertingenti; scutellum subcirculare, flavum ; elytra penitus parallela, versus apicem sublatiora, undique costis duabus brevibus obsoletis nec basin nec apicem attingentibus or- nata; nigra, regione scutellari, margine undique ante-medio, et fascié lata post-medidé (versus margines ampliore) flavis ; fascize margines haud recti sed ineequaliter instructi; anlenne robuste, nigra: corpus subtus et pedes omnino nigri. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 14. The thorax of this species resembles that of S. frenata (ante, p. 264); but the elytra abundantly differ. The general pattern is the same, but in the species before us there is a flavous fascia ona black ground ; in S. frenata the fascia is black and the elytra are flavous. New Granada. From the Collection of M. La Ferté. 10. S. nigricollis, n. sp. Elongata, parallela, subcostata, nigra, flavo-maculata: caput ad frontem longitudinaliter subfoveolatum, nigrum, labro et parte anteriori flavis; thoraxw transversus, latera rotundata et vix emarginata apparent, depressa tamen et marginata; quoad colorem thorax niger est, lateribus tenuiter flavis; scuwtellum subquadratum, nigrum; elytra parallela, attenuata, apud basin usque ad ante medium undique bi-costata, nigra; plaga lata, post-media, transversa, sed irregularis et inzequaliter in- structa tertiam partem elytrorum occupat; antenn@ satis Genus Schematiza. 267 robuste, nigra: corpus subtus nigrum; pedes quoque nigri, femorum anteriorum basibus flavo-adumbratis. Long. corp. lin. 22; lat. lin. J. A beautiful little species from New Granada, to be separated from all others by its broad post-medial flavous band, as well as by its slender and parallel form, and its two abbreviated and slightly raised costz on the elytra. From the Collection of M. La Ferté. _§ A. Species elytris apice rotundatis. b. Elytris planis. 11. §. antennalis, n. sp. Elongata, parallela, nigra, flavo-notata: caput nigrum, antice infra antennarum basin flavum ; thorax transversus, depressus, lateribus subsinuatis vix rotundatis et versus apicem ap- proximantibus, nigro-fuscus, ad latera laté flavus; scutellum triangulare ; elytra satis parallela, confertim punctata, fusco- nigra; apud humeros macula flava marginalis versus apicem extendit, alteraque minuta insulata undique apud apicem ; an- tenne nigre, robusta, ad medium incrassatee: corpus subtus nigro-fuscum ; pedes nigri, femorum basibus rufo-flavis. Long. corp. lin. 22; lat. lin. 14. A narrower and more elongate species than S. apicalis of this paper (post, p. 268), and differs also from it in the marginal marking of the elytra, and the coloration of the thorax. Brazil. 12. S. annulicornis, n. sp. Parallela, subdepressa, nigro-fusca, flavo-marginata: caput nigrum, ore et labro flavis; thorax transversus, ad latera rotundatus et valde marginatus, nigro-fuscus, lateribus te- nuiter flavis; scutellum triangulare, rufo-fuscum; elytra parallela, nigro-fusca, undique ad suturam (tenue) etiamque apud margines flavo-vittata (vittis equalibus, rectis, et apicem attingentibus): corpus subtus nigrum; antenne robuste, nigro-fuscee, articulo ultimo flavo, etiamque 3, 4 et 5 apud bases flavo-annulatis; pedes nigri, femorum basibus flavis. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 13. The only species of the genus in which the margins of the elytra are distinctly and evenly flavous. A single specimen in my Collection, received by M. Chevrolat from Columbia. 268 Rev. H. Clark’s Motes on the 13. S. scutellaris, n. sp. Elongata, parallela, depressa, nigra, flavo-ornata: caput ad frontem depressum, flavum, labro et macula media insulari ad basin nigris; thorax transversus, margine basali ad medium emarginato; latera parallela sunt, vix sinuata vel approxi- mantia, sed ad angulos anticos breviter rotundata; thorax undique versus latera longitudinaliter quasi excavatus est; nigro-fuscus, latera laté et margo anterior tenue flavescunt ; scutellum subcordatum, nigro-fuscum ; elytra parallela, plana, nigro-fusca; fascia lata media et ad humeros (apud margi- nes), et versus apicem (sed tenuiter, et vix apicem ipsum attingens) sese laté extendit; fascia flava, margo autem undique suturalis fusco adumbratur ; antenne satis robuste, nigree ; pedes et corpus subtus omnino nigri apparent. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 1. S. scutellaris is not unlike in size and form S. azillaris of Guérin (Cuv. Regne An. 304), from Cayenne; it will be seen, however, to be somewhat more robust; the thorax also is dif- ferent in form, the margins in Guérin’s species being sub-con- tracted towards the apex, not parallel as in the species before us; the pattern also is obviously different; any black variety of S. scudellaris (should such exist) may, I believe, easily be separated by the above differences from the ordinary type of S. axillaris. A single specimen is in my Collection, received by the Marquis La Ferté from Venezuela. 14. 5S. apicaiis, n. sp. Elongata, parallela, sed satis robusta, pube flava et sparsa vestita, nigro-picea: caput nigrum, labro flavo; thoraz latus, ad Jatera rotundatus, ad discum medium depressus, ita ut transvers€ excavatus apparet; rufo-flavus, ad medium fusco-niger; scuéellum triangulare, nigrum ; elytra parallela, rufo-fusca, crebre punctata, ad latera pube flava rarius vestita ; apud apicem undique macula minuta apparet, flava, insulata ; antenne robuste, nigree: corpus subtus nigro- fuscum ; pedes rufo-flavi, nigro-adumbrati. Long. corp. lin. 23; lat. lin. 1}. At first sight this species appears to be a @ of S. antennalis (ante, p. 267); it is, however, quite distinct, not only in coloration (the legs being flavous instead of piceous, the elytra being with- out any marginal flavous marking, and the colour of the elytra Genus Schematiza. 269 more tinged with rufous than in that species), but also in form ; the elytra are manifestly more robust, and more approaching to cylindrical ; and the whole insect is shorter and more evenly parallel. New Granada. From the Collection of M. La Ferté. § B. Species elytris apice emarginatis. 15. S. Hispiformis, n. sp. Oblonga, depressa, apicem versus dilatata, fortiter costata, flava, nigro-ornata: caput breve, foveola media et excavatione undique ad oculorum margines; quoad colorem nigrum; thorax transversus, lateribus sinuato-rotundatis (vel ali- quando ad medium emarginatis), discus medio longitudi- naliter depressus, niger, laté undique flavus; scutellum sub- triangulare, nigro-fuscum ; elytra depressa, ad apicem latiora, apicibus rotundatis, apud suturam haud dehiscentibus, sed ad apicem ipsum undique valde rotundato-emarginatis ; coste quatuor elytron singulum ornant, duz exstantes magne (juxta suturam et juxta marginem), inter has, et inter exter- nam et marginem due alterze apparent, minores (interdum quatuor omnes equantur); inter costas majores vitta irregu- laris nigra a basi extendit ad maculam apicalem (hac macula magna, et apud latera medium versus sese tendenti); antenne robuste, sat elongate, articulis 3—7 ampliatis : corpus subtus et pedes nigri. Long. corp. lin. 43; lat. lin. 23. The peculiar emargination at the extreme apex of the elytra is an abundant separation of the species before us from its con- geners ; in general form it reminds us at once of an Odontota, as is suggested by the excellent MS. name given it by M. Chevrolat, and which I preserve. The species is found in Brazil. I captured three specimens at Petropolis in the Organ Mountains, during my visit there with Mr. John Gray, in February, 1857. 16. S, emarginata, n. sp. Elongata, parallela, rufo-flava, thoracis medio elytrorumque basi scutellari et apice nigris: caput nigrum, frons autem ad antennarum insertionem rufo-fusca est; thorax transversus, Jatera sinuato-rotundata vel ad medium emarginata; margines anterior et posterior recti, transversi; thorax per totum discum depressus est, marginibus undique elevatis et quasi 270 Rev. H. Clark’s Motes on the Genus Schematiza. sursum inflectis, nigro-fuscus, marginibus anterioribus et posterioribus tenuiter, lateralibusque laté flavis; scu¢ellum fuscum ; elytra parallela, sat elongata, costis undique tribus elevatis ; hze costee haud ad apicem attingunt; ad apicem, suturam juxta, elytra valde emarginata sunt, ita ut apex ipse suturalis quasi mucronatus est; quoad colorem elytra flava vel rufo-flava apparent, sed sutura jJuxta scutellum apexque (laté et transverse) nigrescunt: corpus subtus antenneque nigree ; pedes etiam nigri, femorum basibus fusco-adumbratis. Long. corp. lin. 33; lat. lin. 13. The emargination at the apex of the elytra separates this species from all others before me except S. Hispiformis; in colour it approaches 8. preeusta (ante, p. 265). Brazil. In the Collections of Mr. Baly and the Rev. H. Clark. XII. Descriptions of some new Species of Coleopterous Insects belonging to the Eupodous Phytophaga, Natives of the Old World and Australia. By J. O. Wesrwoop, M.A., F.L.S., &c. [Read 3rd September and 7th November, 1864. ] Tue following pages contain descriptions of a number of new species of Coleopterous insects, belonging to the sub-families Sagrides and Megalopides, interesting for their geographical posi- tion. As the Megalopides are almost exclusively natives of the New World, the genera Peecilomorpha, Temnaspis and Leucastea (to which the major part of the species subsequently described belong) may be considered as their Old World representatives. The species are generally of varied colours. Genus MecynopeEra, Hope. Sp. 1. Mecynodera Balyi. Picta brevior et pro magnitudine latior; lete fulva, capite, an- tennis, pedibus (basi femorum excepta) et maculis protho- racis et elytrorum nigris; tota glabra, nitida, et fere levis; prothorace subquadrato, macula magna discoidali, in qua Junula profunde impressa, angulisque anticis nigris; elytris macula scutellari, semicirculo nigro (lineam curvatam punc- torum valde impressorum includentem), macula subhumerali, fascia ultra medium lateraliter profunde punctata, maculis- que duabus subapicalibus, nigris; metasterno intra pedes medios valde porrecto. Long. fere $ unc. Habitat in Nova Hollandia, Hunter’s River, D. Horsley. In Mus. Hopeiano Oxoniz, olim nostro, Melly, H. Clark, &c. Although I have been acquainted with this species more than twenty years, and had applied to it the specific name of M. sculp- tilis, I cordially adopt the name used above proposed for the species by the Rev. Hamlet Clark.* * [Since the first part of this paper was read, a description and figure of Mecy- nodera Balyi have been published by the Rev. H. Clark in the Journ. of Entom. ll, 248.— Sec. Ent. Soc.] 272 Prof. Westwood’s Descriptions of some Genus Ameratra, Hope. Sp. 1. Ametalla W-nigra. A, Spinole brevior et robustior, et 4. stenodera crassior et paullo major ; prothorace subcordato, angulis posticis extus paullo productis ; nigra, subtus cum pedibus vix grisco- sericans, antennis (apice nigris), tibiis tarsisque obscure rufis ; facie carina tenui polita inter oculos; prothorace punctis minutis obsito, medio Jate at non profunde impresso, rufes- centi, disco angulisque anticis nigris; elytris subconvexis, fulvis, macula magna basali irregulari W simulante, fascia irregulari media apicibusque nigris; femoribus obscure rufis, posticis permagnis, macula magna nigra media notatis, Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat in Nova Hollandia, Swan River. In Mus. Hopeiano Oxonie. Genus Pactromorena, Hope. Sp. 1. Poecilomorpha Westermanni. Oblonga; elytris elongatis ; capite porrecto ; antennis brevibus, nigro-setosis, articulis 3io et 4to brevibus, 7 ultimis incras- satis, serratis, ultimis paullo minoribus; fulva, aureo-setosa ; labro, fascia clypel, linea verticali Jongitudinali et per me- dium pronoti extensa, antennis, scutello, maculaque apicali elytrorum nigris; elytris punctatis; corpore infra piceo, im- punctato, nitido; metasterno impressione profunda postica ; pedibus piceo-nigris, femoribus magis rufescentibus ; coxis anticis et basi femorum subtus flavis. Long. corp. lin, 53. Habitat in Guinea. In Mus. D. Westermann. The elongated elytra (two and half times as long as the broadest part of the prothorax), and the rather more attenuated 10th and 11th joints of the antennze, separate this species from the typical Peecilomorphe. Sp. 2. Peecilomorpha Balyana. Nigra, nitida, flavo-varia; capite nigro, facie macula biloba flava nigro-setosa; clypeo ad basim nigro, apice cum labro flavo ; palpis et antennis fulvo-brunneis; pronoto flavo, crebre punc- tato, maculis duabus clavatis disci ad marginem posticum conjunctis; scutello, humeris, maculis duabus in medio disci alterisque duabus majoribus subapicalibus elytrorum nigris ; corpore infra nigro, setis griseis adpressis dense vestito ; femoribus piceis (anticis pallidioribus), griseo-setosis; tibiis tarsisque fulvis, Long. corp. lin. 4. Vs a New Species of Eupodous Phytophaga. 273 Habitat in Africa australi. In Mus. Hopeiano Oxonie (D. Baly dedit.) P. Afre, Klug, proxima, at minor, colore pallide flavo, antennis pedibusque pallidis, setisque nigris in apicibus elytrorum. Sp. 3. Paecilomorpha luteipennis. Oblonga, parallela, nigra, nitida, pilis griseis dense vestita ; antennis serrato-pectinatis ; elytris pallide albido-luteis punc- tatis; segmento ultimo abdominis semicirculariter in medio impresso ; femoribus posticis crassis ; capitis vertice impresso inter oculos; elytrorum latitudine longitudinem vix duplo excedenti. Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat in Sierra Leonum. In Mus. Britann. et D. Rev. Hamlet Clark. Sp. 4. Paecilomorpha Gersiaeckeri. Oblonga, subparallela, crebre punctata; elytris profundius punctatis, rufo-fulva, luteo-setosa, dimidio apicali elytrorum fulvo; mandibulis, articulis 7 ultimis antennarum, maculisque duabus rotundatis in medio elytrorum, metasterni lateribus cum pleuris, macula ovali externa femorum posticorum, et basi segmenti ultimi ventralis (integri) nigris; femoribus posticis magnis, subtus pone medium tuberculo brevi conico armatis; tlblis 4 posticis valde curvatis; metasterno valde convexo. Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat in Java (D. Goring). In Mus. Reg. Berolinensi. Sp. 5. Peecilomorpha Lacordairi. Lata, pronoti lateribus pone medium valde rotundato-productis, flavescenti-fulva, glaberrima ; capite et pronoti lateribus parce punctulatis et nigro-setulosis ; elytris atris, vage punctatis, capitis macula frontali impressa alteraque in medio disci pronoti nigris; antennis fuscis, basi fulvis, articulis 7 ultimis Vix serratis; meso- et meta-sterni lateribus nigris; pedibus ni- gris; femoribus 4 anticis basi fulvis, femoribus posticis crassis, dente subapicali armatis, flavis, extus macula magna basali notatis ; tibiis 2 posticis fulvis, apice tarsisque nigris. Long. corp. lin. 54. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. DD. Murray et Baly. I have great pleasure in retaining the specific name proposed 274 Prof. Westwood’s Descriptions of some by Mr. Baly for this species in honour of one of the most philo- sophical entomologists of this or any previous age, who, in addi- tion to great powers of generalization, is endowed with a remark- able aptitude for seizing the minute discriminations of species. Sp. 6. Pcecilomorpha parvula. Subcylindrica; capite prothoracis latitudine, hujus Jateribus in medio rotundatis, basi et apice linea impressa constrictis, luteo-fulva, nitida, capite et pronoto fere Javibus, supra setis luteis et nigris instructa; elytris vage punctatis; antennis nigris, extus latis, serratis, articulis longius nigro-setosis, articulo basali fulvo; abdomine subtus, tubiis tarsisque cum apice elytrorum nigris; femoribus posticis mediocriter in- crassatis. Long. corp. lin. 23. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. D. Murray. Sp. 7. Paectlomorpha murina. Brevis, prothorace subconico, elytris e basi ad apicem sensim attenuatis; nigra, subopaca, creberrime punctulata, pube- scentia brevi olivacea induta, plagis duabus longitudinalibus inter oculos alterisque duabus disci pronoti, maculis duabus triangularibus submediis ad latera elytrorum, duabusque subapicalibus, subnudis relictis; antennis nigris, articulis ultimis latis, serratis; pedibus et corpore subtus dense pu- bescentibus; femoribus posticis magnis, subtus inermibus; tibiis posticis in mare elongatis, curvatis, et in medio infra angulatis. Long. corp. lin. 443—6. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. D. Murray. Var.—Elytris (detritis) obscure piceo-fulvis, margine et apice nigris, vel basi tantum rufescente, vel fascia tenui transversa pone medium, lutescenti. The males in this species are larger than the females and are distinguished by having a slight angulation in the middle of the posterior tibize on the under-side, Sp. 8. Paecilomorpha Calabarica. Parva, cylindrica, obscure fulva; capite et pronoto vix punctu- latis,immaculatis; elytris chalybeeo-nigris, punctatis ; antennis apice serratis, nigris, articulo basali subtus fulvo; femoribus New Species of Eupodous Phytophaga. 275 fulvis, tibiis tarsisque nigris, fusco-hirtis ; corpore subtus fulvo, abdomine nigro, apice segmentorum lutescenti. Long. corp. lin. 3}. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. D. Murray. This species is very close to the type P. Passerinii, but is con- siderably smaller, with black elytra and darker legs. Sp. 9. Pcecilomorpha variabilis. Subcylindrica; capite et prothorace zque latis et fere ejus- dem magnitudinis, sublaevibus; oculis magnis; elytris la- tioribus, humeris rotundatis, fere parallelis, vage punctatis; tota luteo-fulva vel fulva, nitida, vix pubescens ; antennis nigris, articulis basalibus fulvis, apicalibus sublatis, sub- serratis, articulo 4to minimo; alis nigris; femoribus posticis Vix incrassatis; tibiis curvatis. (Typus, vel P. fulva.) Long. corp. lin. 33. 244 varietas (vel P. lutescens). Tota pallide lutescens, oculis paullo majoribus. Long. lin. 23—33. 3'* varietas (vel P. basalis). ‘Typo convenit, at elytrorum di- midio basali piceo-nigro, in colorem fulvum sensim palles- cent. 4'@ yarietas (vel P. subapicalis). Typo convenit, at elytris piceo-nigris, regione scutellari et maculis duabus indistinctis subapicalibus fulvis, tibiis tarsisque nigris. Long. lin. 2. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. Hopeiano Oxonie et D. Murray. After much consideration I feel induced to regard all the above- described insects as varieties of one species, their general form and punctation being identical. Genus Temnaspis, Lacordaire. Sp. 1. Zemnaspis arida. Robusta, prothorace (praesertim postice) capite multo latiori, angulis humeralibus elytrorum subacutis ; tota fulva, crebre punctata, nitida, setis paucis pallidis vestita; elytris postice valde convexis ; femoribus posticis crassis, piceo-castaneis, subtus magis rufis; corpore infra luteo-fulvo, metasterno obscuriori (magis castaneo), tuberculis duobus sat promi- 276 Prof. Westwood’s Descriptions of some nentibus ; abdomine piceo-nigro, basi (inter trochanteres posticos) pallide lutea. Long. corp. Jin. 53. Habitat in Borneo. In Mus. D. Edw. Sheppard. Sp. 2. Temnaspis Cuming (Hope, MS.). T. aride et fervide magnitudine et statura proxima: tota fulvo- lutea, nitida, supra vix setosa, sparsim punctata; capitis vertice impresso, prothorace postice latiori, angulis posticis rotundatis, humeris elytrorum prominentibus obliquis, an- tennarum articulis 7 ultimis tarsisque paullo obscurioribus ; corpore toto infra fulvo-luteo; femoribus posticis versus apicem infra bispinosis, extus dimidio basali castaneo. Long. corp. lin. 54. Habitat in Manilla. D. Cuming. In Mus. Hopeiano Oxonize et D. Baly. Obs.—Labium (se. ligula) rotundatum et in medio marginis antici profunde semicirculariter incisum est. Sp. 3. Temnaspis chrysopyga. Elongata, foemina breviori ; capite lato, prothorace subrotundato, antice et postice vix constricto; nigra vel picea, vix ni- tida, mare brunneo, subtus nonnihil preesertim pedibus vario, foemina obscuriori ; valde setulosa setis griseis vel aureis, podice presertim foeminz dense vestito; elytris luteis, extus et apice obscuris, nigro-punctatis, punctis parvis, disco versus scutellum fere lavi; clypeo fulvo; antennis nigris, articulis apicalibus latis, serratis, articulo basali interdum subferrugineo; tiblis, preesertim posticis, in mare curvatis, podice ejusdem sexus in medio subcarinato, scutello nigro, apice late truncato. Long. corp. & lin. 7; @ lin. 53. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. D. Murray. The sexual distinctions in this species are more marked than in the majority of the insects of this genus, the head of the male being broader than the prothorax, and the body in this sex con- filosatily more elongated than in the female and gradually attenu- ated tothe extremity. In the specimens before me it is the female which has the extremity of the body so strikingly clothed with golden hairs. Sp. 4, Temnaspis Bengalensis. Fulva, nitida, sat rude punctata, luteo-hirta; capitis margine postico et macula antica brunneis; pronoto maculis duabus New Species of Eupodous Phytophaga. 277 magnis ante medium disci alteraque parva postica nigris ; scutello brunneo; elytrorum humeris maculaque magna dis- coidali pone medium singuli nigris; prothorace subtus ma- culis duabus anticis; metasterno toto, fasciaque subapicali abdominis nigris; pedibus fulvis, femoribus posticis nigris, apice fulvis, subtus spinis duabus apicalibus armatis. Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat in Ind. Orient., Bengal. In Mus. Hopeiano Oxoniz. Sp. 5. Temnaspis lugubris. Nigra, subopaca, crebre punctatissima, griseo-setulosa ; elytris in -medio fasciis duabus indistinetis pallido-setosis; antennis pec- tinatis ; pronoto linea media glabra; femoribus posticis valde incrassatis, unidentatis. Long. corp. lin. 73. Habitat in Madagascar. D. Goudot. In Mus. Reg. Berolinensi. Corpus supra griseo-setosum, setis in maculas et fascias duas irregulares medias elytrorum dispositis, pilisque nigris varium. Antenne articulis 7 ultimis clavam Jatam pectinatam forman- tibus. Clypeus cum tubereulo conico antico epistomatis lineaque media pronoti glabris et impunctatis. Prothorax antice et postice constrictus, parte latiori paullo pone medium sita. Elytra prope scutellum gibbosa, humeris prominentibus, basi fasciis duabus submediis maculisque duabus subapicalibus griseo-setosis. Corpus infra nigrum, setosum, lateribus me- tasternl coxisque posticis luteis. Femora incrassata, uni- dentata, in medio grisea. Tibi posticee prope basin intus paullo dilatatz et griseo-setosz, Genus Leucastza, Stal. (Pecilomorpha, pars, Baly.) Sp. 1. Leucastea rubidipennis. Nigra, nitida, punctata; pedibus griseo-setosis; faciei maculis duabus intra-ocularibus labroque rufis ; elytris rubido-ferru- gineis ; antennarum articulis 7 ultimis submoniliformibus, subgracilibus ; scutelli apice subtruncato. Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat in Natalia. In Mus. Britann. Sp. 2. Leucastea Dohrni, Stal, (Ofv. af K. Vet. Acad. Foérhandl. 1855, p. 345.) “ Sordide lutescens, breviter pilosa, macula una frontis intra- VOL, II. THIRD SERIES, PART IlI.— NOV. 1864. x 278 Prof. Westwood’s Descriptions of some oculari, unaque thoracis utrimque laterali, elytrisque nigri- cantibus; antennis, tibiis basi et a medio apicem versus, tarsisque nigro-fuscis. Long. 83 mill.” Habitat Port Natal. Var.—Absque macula intra-oculari nigra, disco prothoracis immaculato, angulis lateralibus deflexis pronoti nigris, an- tennarum articulo basali subtus fulvo. Long. 4 lin. Habitat Zulu, Afr. merid. In Mus. D. Rev. Hamlet Clark. Sp. 3. Leucastea concolor. L. Dohrni omnino nisi coloribus convenit, elytrisque crebrius punctatis: tota sordide fulva, luteo-setosa; elytris magis lutescentibus ; capite fulvo, macula parva intra-oculari an- tennisque nigris, harum articulo basali piceo; prothoracis disco ante medium maculis duabus rotundatis plus minusve obscuris; scutello nigro; capite infra macula nigra jugulari; prosterni lateribus, meso- et meta-sternis omnino nigris ; abdo- mine fulvo, segmentis basalibus in medio nigro late maculatis ; pedibus fulvis, geniculis, dimidio apicali tibiarum, tarsisque nigris. Long. corp. lin. 43. Habitat in Natalia. In Mus. Reg. Berolinensi. 24a var. (vel L. nigricornis). Maculis prothoracis fere obsoletis, antennarum articulo basali infra fulvo, scutello fulvo, meta- sterno fulvo, basim versus fuscato, abdomine toto fulvo. Long. lin. 4. Habitat Zulu. In Mus. D. Rev. Hamlet Clark. 3i* var. (vel Z. proxima). Maculis prothoracis obsoletis, an- tennarum articulo basali infra fulvo, scutello nigro, apice truncato; pronoti angulis anticis deflexis, nigris; mesosterno anticé et lateribus nigris, nec non metapleuris et marginibus coxarum posticarum nigris. Long. lin. 3. Habitat in Natalia. In Mus. D. Baly. Sp. 4. Leucastea atripennis. Leete fulva, nitida; capite et pronoti lateribus vage punctatis, hujus disco levi; elytris atris, regulariter punctatis ; oblonga, capite prothorace minori, hujus lateribus rotundatis, basi et apice linea tenui subconstrictis; elytris latioribus, subparal- New Species of Eupodous Phytophaga. 279 lelis ; antennis nigris, articulis 4 basalibus fulvis, apicalibus paullo crassioribus, subtrigonis; femoribus fulvis, posticis crassis, subtus in medio paullo angulatis; tibiis (2 posticis basi fulvis exceptis) tarsisque nigris. Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat Old Calabar. In Mus. D. Murray. This species might at first sight be mistaken for a large specimen of Pacilomorpha Malabarica, but the structure of the antenne at once indicates its distinction. Sp. 5. Leucastea dimidiata. L. Dohrni et atripenni statura et habitu proxima: cyaneo-nigra,- nitida, parce setosa; capite et pronoto fulvis, clypeo macula rotunda intra-oculari fusca; antennis nigris; scutelli apice late truncato; thorace subtus cyaneo-nigro, nitido, griseo-villoso, margine postico pro- et meta-sterni fulvis; abdomine fulvo, segmento apicali integro; pedibus nigris, femoribus subtus plus minusve luteis, anticis fere omnino fulvis, posticis macula ovali utrinque fulva. Long. corp. lin. 4. Habitat in Natalia (Poeppig). In Mus. Reg, Berol. Sp. 6. Leucastea Westermannt. Precedentibus statura et habitu convenit: tota picea, nitida, luteo-setosa, setis pedum longioribus ; antennarum articulis basalibus apice rufescentibus; capite infra, metasterno, ventre- que obscure fulvis, segmentorum marginibus pallidioribus ; pedibus piceis, femoribus posticis subtus fulvis, subincrassatis, et in medio infra paullo angulatis. Long. corp. Jin. 4. Habitat in Guinea. In Mus. D. Westermann. Sp. 7. Leucastea antica. Oblonga, prothoracis lateribus pone medium rotundatis, elytris subparallelis, capite et pronoto glabris, hoc fere levi, elytris punctatis ; fulva, elytris magis testaceis sparsim luteo-setosa, margine postico clypei maculaque in medio faciei et scutello obscuris; antennis nigris ; thorace subtus nigro, nitido; abdo- mine fulvo; pedibus nigris, griseo-hirtis; femoribus anticis infra fulvis. Long. corp. lin. 3. Habitat in Natalia. In Mus. D. Rev. Hamlet Clark. 200) = Prof. Westwood’s Descriptions, &c. Sp. 8. Leucastea ephippiata. Oblonga, nitida ; prothoracis lateribus pone medium rotundatis et capite paullo latioribus ; elytris pone medium parum latioribus; pallide fulva, capite et prothorace sublevibus, setosis; antennis fulvis; elytris fulvo-albidis, dimidio basali piceo-nigris ; tarsorum apicibus fulvis. Long. corp. lin. 32. Habitat in Africa occidentali. In Mus. D. Hamlet Clark. ? Genus PepRILLia, (n. g.). Temnaspidi proximum; differt corpore parvo, breviori et cras- siori: elytris postice valde convexis ; pronoto pone medium valde constricto, antennis elongatis, ad medium elytrorum extensis, articulis e 3tio sensim incrassatis, haud serratis ; palpis maxillaribus articulo ultimo conico; labil margine an- tico fere recte truncato; scutelli apice truncato; femoribus posticis incrassatis, haud spinosis, tibiis curvatis, unguibus tarsorum basi valde dilatatis. Sp. 1. Pedrillia longicorais. Testaceo-rufa, fulvo-setosa; capite et pronoto punctulatis; elytris punctatis; antennis nigris, articulo basali luteo basi obscuriori, 24° obscuro; pedibus nigris, tibiarum basi piceo- fusca; tarsis piceis ; corpore infra ferrugineo; meso- et meta- sterni lateribus et segmento 5” ventrali nigris. Long. corp. lin. 23. Habitat in Ind. Orient., Bombay. In Mus. Britann. et D. Baly. ( O81) XIII. A Monograph of the Genus Yphthima ; with Descrip- tions of two new Genera of Diurnal Lepidoptera. By W. C. Hewitson, F.L.S. [Read December 5th, 1864.] I wAve myself experienced so much difficulty in determining the species of the genus Yphthima, as to believe that if I have success- fully worked it out, I shall have been of some use. It is an excellent genus; I have neither admitted nor rejected any species about which I have the least doubt. Some of the new species are from the Collection of Mr. Wallace. The genus Cenyra is nearly allied to Yphthima, as well as to Cceenonympha; from both it differs in the neuration of the wings, from Coenonympha in its very different palpi. Genus Canyra, Hewitson. Head small; eyes small. Palpi long, straight, much com- pressed, thickly clothed with hair; the third joint long and nearly naked. Antenne slender, short, slightly and gradually thickened to the point. Anterior wing rounded; costal margin arched, apex and outer margin rounded ; inner margin nearly straight; costal nervure much swollen at the base, extending to the middle of the margin ; subcostal nervure with four equi-distant branches, two before the end of the cell; discoidal cell half the length of the wing, the nervures which close it forming a regular curve inwards, the first obsolete, the second and third of equal length, joining the third branch of the median nervure at a distance from its base. Posterior wing very round; the costal nervure reaching a little beyond the middle of the margin; the subcostal branched before the end of the cell; the disco-cellular nervules, which close the cell obliquely, are slightly curved inwards, the first being half as long as the second. Ceenyra Hebe. (Pl. XVII. figs. 1, 2.) Yphthima Hebe, Trimen, Tr. Ent. Soc. 3rd Ser. i. 280. Ceenyra Corycia, Hewitson. Alis rufo-brunneis ; anticis utrinque biocellatis ; posticis supra quatuor, subtus ocellis sex ; omnibus argenteo-pupillatis. Female.—Upperside pale brown; both wings crossed by indis- VOL. II. THIRD SERIES, PART 1V.—MARCH, 1865, Y 282 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Monograph of the tinct bands of darker brown, both with two submarginal bands of brown. Anterior wing with two ocelli: posterior wing with six : each black, with silver pupil, yellow iris, and rufous border. Underside as above, except that it is paler. Male like the female, except that it is darker, and has the ocelli on the upperside of the posterior wing much less distinct. Exp. 13 inch. Hab. Natal. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Genus Xo1s, Hewitson. Head large; eyes large, smooth. Palpi rather short, densely clothed with long hair, the last joint short, naked, pointing outwards. Antenne short, gradually thicker from the middle to the point. Anterior wing short; costal margin arched, apex and outer margin rounded ; inner margin straight ; costal nervure swollen at the base, extending to the middle of the margin; subcostal nervure with four branches, the first before the end of the cell, the other three branches equi-distant from each other, more distant from the first; the discoidal cell short and broad, closed obliquely by the nervures, the first very short; the third, which is a little longer than the second, joins the third median nervule at a distance from its base. Posterior wing very round; the costal nervure extending three- fourths the length of the wing; the discoidal cell more than half the length of the wing, closed obliquely by the disco-cellular nervules, the second nervure three times the length of the first. Xois Sesara,n.s. (Pl. XVII. figs. 3, 4.) Alis albis; anticis marginibus fuscis, utrinque ocello maximo, argenteo-bipupillato ; subtus rufis, fusco-undulatis. Female.—Upperside white. Anterior wing grey brown, witha large spot of white on the inner margin; a large ocellus towards the apex, with two pupils of silver blue; the iris orange, bordered with brown ; the base of the costal margin rufous, the outer margin broadly brown. Underside rufous-orange. Anterior wing with the ocellus as above, spotless with the exception of some slight uudulations near the apex. Posterior wing undulated throughout with dark brown. Exp. 1,5; inch. Hab. Fiji. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Genus Yphthima, §c. 283 Genus Yrutuma, Hubner. 1. Yphthima Asterope. Hipparchia Asterope, Klug in Ehrenb. & Hempr. Symb. Phys. pl. 29, figs. 11, 12, 13, 14; Lederer, Beit. Schm. Asia Minor, pl. 1, f. 6. Yphthima Norma, Westw. in Gen. Diur. Lep. pl. 67, f. 1. Alis fuscis; anticis singulis ocello unico; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis ; posticis ocellis tribus argenteo-pupillatis. Exp. 1,5; to 149 inch. Hab. Syria, China, Natal, Calabar. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. This species may be easily known from all others by the circular band of brown which passes round the ocellus on the underside of the anterior wing, as well as by a rufous space (some- times clouded with brown) below the said circular band free from undulations. As will be seen from the localities quoted, it is widely distributed, and differs considerably in size. Y. Norma, of Westwood, from China, I believe to be only a small variety of this species, darker and wanting the ocellus on the upperside of the anterior wing; there are similar varieties from the Holy Land. Specimens from Calabar and Natal do not differ from those of Europe, except in having the ring of brown which encircles the ocellus of the anterior wing more distinctly marked above, as in Norma, and in having the underside more clouded with rufous stria. 2. Yphthima Arctous. Papilio Arctous, Fabricius; Godart, Encl. M. p. 552; Bois- duval, Voy. Astrol. p. 156. Alis fuscis ; singulis utrinque ocello unico ; subtus griseis, rufo- undulatis. Exp. 1,9, inch. Hab. Aru, Port Denison. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very nearly allied to Y. Asterope, but differs from it in wanting two of the ocelli of the posterior wing. Each of the authors above referred to, in describing this species, expressly states that it has one ocellus and one only on each wing, above and below; and yet they one and all refer to Donovan’s figure, in his “ Insects of New Holland,” plate 24, which has “vo ecelli on both sides of the posterior wing. Donovan’s Y ° ~ 284 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Monograph of the figure may represent a variety of this species, but it seems to me better to consider it distinct, if we are to depend upon the number of ocelli to denote specific distinction. 3. Yphthima Arctoides. Papilio Arctous, Donovan, Ins. New Holland, pl. 24. Alis fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico, posticis duobus. 4. Yphthima Philomela. Yphthima Philomela, Hiibner, Zutr. f. 83, 84. Alis fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra duobus, subtus albis, rufo-undulatis, ocellis quatuor. The four ocelli on the underside of the posterior wing are placed thus: one near the apex, and three together towards the the anal angle ; they are indistinctly pupilled with silver. 5. Yphthima Inica,n.s. (Pl. XVII. fig. 5.) Alis rufo-fuscis ; omnibus supra ocello unico; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis, anticis ocello unico. Female.—Upperside rufous-brown, with a single ocellus on each wing. Underside with rufous undulations throughout. Anterior wing with the ocellus as above. Posterior wing without ocelli, clouded with darker colour. Exp. 1,3, inch. Hab. East India. In the Collection of the British Museum. Closely allied to Y. Asterope, but without the circular brown band which surrounds the ocellus on the anterior wing of that species, and also without the rufous space (devoid of undulations) near the anal angle. 6. Yphthima Nareda. (Pl. XVII. figs. 6, 7.) Satyrus Nareda, Kollar in Hugel’s Reise n. Kaschmir, p. 451, Alis fuscis; singulis supra ocello unico; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis, anticis ocello unico, posticis tribus. Exp. ¢ 1-5,, 9 1-8, inch. Hab. Northern India. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. I have no doubt that figs. 6 and 7 of the plate, although of very different colour, are the sexes of the same species; others Genus Yphthima, &c. 285 in my Collection are of an intermediate tint. ‘The anal ocellus of the male has only one pupil, that of the female has two, 7. Yphthima Chenu. Satyrus Chenu, Guérin-Méneville in Delessert, Souv. Voy. Ind. pl: 21, :f. 2; p. 77. Alis fuscis; singulis supra ocello unico; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis, anticis ocello unico, posticis fasciis tribus rufis ocellisque quatuor. Exp. 13 inch. Hab. Neelgherry Mountains. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Underside grey, undulated throughout with rufous-brown. Anterior wing crossed by two bands, one on each side of the ocellus and meeting at the inner margin, so as to form a triangle. Posterior wing with five ocelli, one (the largest) apart from the rest near the apex ; crossed by three bands of rufous-brown ; the space between the second and third bands nearly white. Mr. Moore has inadvertently considered this species and Y. Philomela as the same. 8. Yphthima Stellera. Hipparchia Stellera, Eschsch. Voy. Kotzebue, pl. 10, f. 24. Yphthima Sempera, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monats. vol. vii. p- 125. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis supra ocello unico, posticis quatuor ; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis et bifasciatis, posticis ocellis sex geminatis. Exp. 1.3, inch. Hab. Manilla. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Underside white, undulated with rufous-brown, both wings crossed* before the middle by two bands of rufous-brown, the margins and a submarginal band dark brown; anterior wing with one large ocellus, posterior wing with six, in pairs, all with pupils of silvery blue, the irides yellow. Mr. Semper has kindly sent me examples of the butterfly to which Dr. Felder has given his name, but I cannot see any dif- ference whatever to separate it from Y. Stellera. 286 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Monograph of the 9. Yphthima Baldus. Papilio Baldus, Fabricius, Ent. Sys. iii. p. 323; Godart, Encl. M. p. 551; Donovan’s Ins. India, Pl. 36. P, Lara, Donovan, Nat. Repos. pl. 71. Alis fuscis; anticis utrinque ocello unico ; posticis supra ocellis quatuor, subtus sex. Male.—Underside grey-white, undulated throughout with rufous-brown, and crossed by irregular bands of the same colour ; the ocellus on the anterior wing large; the ocelli of the posterior wing six, rarely touching, placed in pairs apart from each other, and at very different distances from the ouler margin; the pupils of all the ocelli brilliant silver. Female like the male, except that the wings are broader, and the ocelli more distinct. Exp. 1,4—1,% inch. Hab. India, Java, Sumatra, Macassar. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. This is the variable species of the genus: examples differ greatly in size; some have the ocellus of the anterior wing small and obscure; some have the underside more closely undulated than others; in one the six ocelli of the underside are very mi- nute and deformed, another is without the ocellus on the upper- side of the anterior wing. I have included Donovan’s Lara, which does not differ from his figure of Baldus. Donovan quotes the Linnean description of Lara, and states that his figure was copied from the specimen described by Linnzeus in the Linnzan cabinet. Now it so hap- pens that the description referred to is that of one of the Ly- cenide from the Cape, closely allied to, if not identical with, P. lolaus of Cramer (Zeritis Lara of the “ Genera of Diurnal Lepidoptera”). It is true that there is an Yphthima in the Lin- nzan Collection from which Donovan’s figure may have been drawn, but Linneeus has not described it. Mr. Westwood has inadvertently erred in the same way in the “ Genera,” and has kindly assisted me to rectify his mistake ; and, in pointing out an error, [ think it only fair to him to express my admiration at the almost unerring accuracy with which his part of that work was accomplished. Genus Yphthima, &c. 237 10. Yphthima Lysandra. Papilio Lysandra, Cramer, pl. 293. Alis fuscis; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra ocellis duobus, subtus quinque. Very nearly allied to Y. Baldus, and though it differs from it in having usually two ocelli only on the upperside of the posterior wing, there are sometimes indications of others, and, although it has also five ocelli only on the underside of the said wing, the anal ocellus has two pupils ; these ocelli are however much more dis- tinct and more nearly in a line, and the band of rufous-brown which precedes the ocellus on the underside of the anterior wing is nearer to it. This species, like Ba/dus, is sometimes without the ocellus on the upperside of anterior wing. 11. Yphthima Itonia, n.s. (Pl. XVIII. fig. 13.) Alis fuscis; anticis utrinque ocello unico magno; _posticis supra ocellis quinque; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis, posticis ocellis septem. Male.—Upperside grey-brown. Anterior wing with one large bipupilled ocellus. Posterior wing with five, one minute near the apex, two larger between the median nervules, and two minute near the anal angle, all black; the pupils silver; the irides orange-yellow. Underside with rufous undulations throughout. Both wings crossed near the middle by an indistinct rufous band. Anterior wing with the large ocellus as above; posterior wing with seven ; the first and third obsolete. Female like the male, except that the ocelli on both sides are much more distinct, and that the posterior wing has seven perfect ocelli. Exp. # 1,4, 2 1,54 inch. Hab. White Nile. In the Collections of the British Museum and W. C. Hewitson. 12. Yphihima fasciata, n. s. Alis fuscis, griseo-undulatis; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra ocellis sex ; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis, posticis trifasciatis, ocellis septem. Upperside brown. Both wings undulated with grey, chiefly beyond the middle; both crossed at the middle by a common band 288 Mr, W. C. Hewitson’s Monograph of the of darker colour, the margins dark brown. Anterior wing with one large bipupillated ocellus ; posterior wing with five or six obscurely marked upon a band of rufous-brown. Underside grey, beautifully undulated throughout with rufous- brown ; both wings crossed by two bands of darker colour. An- terior wing with the ocellus as above but more distinct ; posterior wing with seven small ocelli of nearly equal size, placed as above upon a band of rufous-brown, all black, the pupils silver, the irides orange-yellow. Exp. 13 inch. Hab. Sarawak, Sumatra. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. When the plates were drawn I believed that this species might be only a variety of Y. /tonia, as it is the only other species which has seven ocelli on the posterior wing; I now think it better to consider it as a distinct species. Itis larger than Y. Itonia, has a distinct band of darker colour crossing the middle of both wings on the upperside, and is easily known from all the other species by having two transverse bands on the underside of both wings, and on the posterior wing a third band in which the ocelli are placed. It is from the Collection of Mr. Wallace. Bears great resemblance to Y. Baldus, but instead of having the ocelli in pairs and apart as in that species it has them in a line. 13. Yphthima Ceylonica,n.s. (Pl. XVIII. figs. 14, 15.) Alis fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico ; posticis dimidio pos- teriore niveo, ocello unico; subtus niveis, rufo-undulatis, posticis ocellis quatuor. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with one large ocellus, with two silver pupils, Posterior wing with the outer half white, the outer margin and a submarginal line of black; one obscure ocellus and a minute black spot. Underside white, undulated with rufous-brown. Anterior wing with the ocellus as above; thickly undulated towards the outer margin ; posterior wing slightly undulated near the margins, with four ocelli, one near the apex, three near the anal angle, the outer ocellus minute, blind, the anal ocellus with two pupils of silver. Exp. 1,%, inch. ; Hab. Ceylon. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. The ocelli on the underside of the posterior wing differ much. In rs Genus Yphthima, §c. 289 one specimen, three are perfect, one blind; in another two only are perfect. 14. Yphthima Loryma,n.s. (PI. XVIII. figs. 16, 17.) Alis fuscis; anticis nonnunquam ocello unico; posticis supra duobus; subtus cineraceis, rufo-fasciatis undulatisque, pos- ticis ocellis tribus. Male.—Upperside dark brown, broadly rufous at the outer margins; a submarginal band of dark brown. Anterior wing with one obscure blind ocellus; posterior wing with two, both near the anal angle; the pupils silver, the irides very narrow, rufous. Underside white, undulated throughout with rufous-brown ; anterior wing with the ocellus rufous-brown, with two silver pupils; crossed on each side of the ocellus by bands of rufous- brown. Posterior wing with three black ocelli, one near the apex, two near the anal angle, the pupils silver, the anal ocellus with two pupils; crossed by several short bands of rufous-brown. Female does not differ from the male, except in its larger size, and greater breadth of wing. Exp. 1,§,—1,3, inch. Hab. Macassar, Celebes. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. This species by the variety, fig. 16, from Celebes, approaches nearly to Y. Pandocus as well as to Y. Amphithea. 15. Yphthima Amphithea. Yphthima Amphithea, Ménétriés, in Schrenck’s Amur- Lande, pl. 3, f. 10, p. 41. Alis fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico ; posticis supra duobus ; subtus obscuris, rufo-undulatis, posticis ocellis tribus. Exp. 1.8, inch. Hab. Amoor-land, Sula. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson, from Mr. Wallace. The difference between this and the last-described species is chiefly one of colour. On the underside Y. Amphithea is entirely suffused with rufous-brown. It is, as described by Ménétriés, of peculiar form, the outer margin of the anterior wing being slightly sinuated towards the anal angle. The figure in the Amur-Lande is a very bad one. 290 Mr, W. C. Hewitson’s Monograph of the - 16. Yphthima Pandocus. (Pl. XVIII. fig. 12.) Yphthima Pandocus, Moore in Horsfield and Moore, Cat. Lep. E. I. C. p. 235. Alis fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra duo- bus ; subtus albis, rufo-nebulosis et undulatis, posticis ocellis tribus. Exp. 1,9, inch. Hab. Java, Sarawak. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 17. Yphthima Motschulskiji. Satyrus Motschulskiji, Bremer, Beitr. zur Fauna Nord. China; Ménétriés, Cat. Lep. Mus. Acad. Petrop. pl. 6. fig. 5. Alis fuscis; singulis supra ocello unico ; subtus cineraceis, rufo dense undulatis, posticis ocellis tribus. Exp. 15%, inch. Hab. Pekin, Amoy. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very near to Y. Pandocus, but differs from it on the upperside, in having the iris of the anterior wing slightly divided, and in having one ocellus only on the posterior wing. On the underside it is undulated throughout, and has the apical ocellus of the pos- terior wing larger, and bears a great resemblance to Y. Nareda except in colour. 18. Yphthima Sakra. (Pl. XVIII. fig. 18.) Yphthima Sakra, Moore, Horsfield and Moore, Cat. Lep. E. I. C. Mus. p. 236. Alis fuscis; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra duobus, subtus quinque ocellis. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. North India. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson, Mr. Moore describes this species as having four ocelli on the upperside of the posterior wing. Some examples have four ; others have only two, being without the ocelli near the apex and anal angle. Genus Yphthima, Sc. 28 19. Yphthima Methora,n.s. (Pl. XVIII. figs. 20, 21.) Alis rufis, griseo-undulatis ; anticis utrinque ocello maximo ; posticis supra quinque, subtus sex ocellis. Female.—Upperside brown, undulated with grey towards the outer margins; the outer margins and fringe rufous-brown, tra- versed by a grey line. Anterior wing with one very large two- pupilled ocellus on both sides ; posterior wing with five, all black, with pupils dull silver, with irides rufous, narrow. Underside grey, closely undulated throughout with rufous- brown; both wings crossed at the middle by a curved rufous band; posterior wing with six ocelli in pairs; the pupils of bright silver ; the irides orange-yellow. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. North India. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Nearest to Y. Sakra, but of very different aspect. 20. Yphthima Hyagriva. (PI. XVIII. fig. 11.) Yphthima Hyagriva, Moore, Horsf. and Moore, Cat. Lep. E. I. C. Mus, p. 236. Alis fuscis ; singulis supra ocello unico ; subtus rufo griseoque undulatis, posticis ocellis quatuor geminatis. Exp. 15%, inch. Hab. Dargeeling. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Easily known from all the other species by the broad sub- marginal line of brown on both sides, by the geminated oval ocelli near the apex of the posterior wing, and the ochreous colour of the underside. 21. Yphthima Narasingha. (PI. XVIII. fig. 19.) Yphthima Narasingha, Moore, Horsf. and Moore, Cat. Lep. E.I.C. Mus. ps 2386. Alis fuscis; anticis utrinque ocello unico; subtus cineraceis, rufo-undulatis, posticis punctis minutis albis. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Dargeeling. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. The only species which has no ocelli on either side of the pos- 292 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Monograph of the terior wing. On the underside some minute white spots occupy the place where in other species the ocelli are placed. 22. Yphthima Sepyra,n.s. (Pl. XVII. fig. 10.) Alis rufis, griseo-undulatis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico; pos- ticis utrinque sex, subtus geminatis. Male.—Upperside brown, paler round the ocelli, with a sub- marginal line of darker brown. Anterior wing with the usual ocellus on both sides ; posterior wing with two or more. Underside grey, closely undulated with broad rufous-brown striat; both wings crossed by a band of brown before and after the ocelli; posterior wing with six ocelli, geminated, all with pupils of silver and broad irides of orange-yellow. Female does not differ, except that it is slightly undulated with grey round the ocellus of the anterior wing. Exp. 1,6, inch. Hab. Gilolo, Batchian. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson, from Mr. Wallace. The ocelli on the upperside of the posterior wing differ much in number; sometimes there are only two, sometimes a third near the apex, occasionally two at the anal angle, and in one, a female, there are six as below. 23. Yphthima Aphnius. (Pl. XVII. figs. 8, 9.) Satyrus Aphnius, Godart, Encl. M. p. 551. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra fascia fulva, ocellis duobus punctoque minuto; subtus albis, rufo-undulatis, ocellis minutis quatuor cecis. Upperside rufous-brown, with a submarginal band of dark brown. Anterior wing with the usual ocellus on both sides, broadly bordered with orange and pupilled with silver. Pos- terior wing with a large spot of orange beyond the middle, marked with two small ocelli and a minute spot. Underside. Anterior wing rufous-brown, undulated with grey ; posterior wing white, undulated with rufous-brown; the costal margin broadly clouded and undulated with brown; six minute blind ocelli in pairs, those at the anal angle deformed. Exp. 14 inch. Hab. Timor, Isle of France. In the Collection of W.C. Hewitson, from Mr. Wallace. Genus Yphthima, §c. 293 24. Yphthima Tamatave. Satyrus Tamatave, Boisduval, Faune Ent. de Madagascar, pl. 8, figs. 6, 7. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis utrinque ocello unico; posticis supra ocellis duobus ; subtus anticis apice griseo-undulato; pos- ticis griseo fuscoque nebulosis. Male.—Upperside dark rufous-brown. Anterior wing with the ocellus on both sides with a broad rufous-orange iris; posterior wing with two ocelli touching, all with silvery blue pupils. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that it is undulated with grey near the costal and outer margins ; posterior wing grey, clouded and undulated with dark rufous-brown, crossed from the middle of the costal margin to the middle of the wing by a broad band of brown marked with a white spot. Female like the male, except that the anterior wing has the outer margin broadly dark brown, traversed by a line of pale grey-brown, and that the underside is more beautifully variegated (like Satyrus Semele.) The figure in the Faune Ent. de Madagascar is very much paler than any examples which I have seen, and gives no idea of the beauty of the insect. I have not seen an example with a third ocellus on the posterior wing, nor with the prolongation of the rufous spot, as shown in Dr, Boisduval’s figure. EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. Puate XVII. Figs. 1, 2. Coenyra Hebe, Trimen. Figs. 38, 4. Xois Sesara, Hewitson. Fig. 5. Yphthima Inica, Hewitson. Figs. 6, 7. 5p Nareda, Kollar. Figs. 8, 9. as Aphnius, Godart. Fig. 10. 5 Sepyra, Hewitson. Puate XVIII. Fig. 11. Yphthima Hyagriva, Moore. Fig. 12. 9 Pandocus, Moore. Fig. 13. 1 Itonia, Hewitson. Figs, 14, 15. a Ceylonica, Hewitson. Biescal'Gsil (ems. Loryma, Hewitson. Fig. 18. “A Sakra, Moore. Fig. 19. i Narasingha, Moore. Figs. 20, 21. - Methora, Hewitson. ( 295 ) XIV. On the Reversion and Restoration of the Silkworm (Part I1.); with Distinctive Characters of Eighteen Species of Silk-producing Bombycide. By Captain Tuomas Hutron, F.G.S., of Mussooree. (Com- municated by Mr. F. Moors.) {Read December Sth, 1864.] Accorpiné to hitherto received notions all the silkworms now under domestication are mere varieties of one species, and are all placed together under the name of Bombyx Mori; and yet the difference in habits is alone sufficient to point out the existence of several totally distinct species. This circumstance, when some time since noticed by myself in a letter to Mr. F. Moore of the India Museum, elicited the acknowledgment that Entomologists in Europe had long suspected the fact, but that they were without the means of working out all the necessary details, many of the supposed species not being under cultivation in Europe, while no one in India had deemed it worth while to enter into an investigation of the subject. From the moment, however, in which I first recognized the absolute necessity of endeavouring to arrest the rapid strides which disease was making towards the extinction of the silkworm, I became aware, from actual inspection of the worms through all their changes, of the existence of several species, and I at once determined systematically to set to work for the purpose of ex- tricating each from the dark labyrinth of error and confusion in which it had become involved. Any one at all conversant with the Bombycide must be aware of the fact that, for the most part, the species will, in the northern and colder districts of their respective countries, be either strictly annuals, or at the most double-brooded, while those species which yield several crops of silk during the year, indicate thereby that they were originally imported into the localities where they are now domesticated, from the warm and more prolific lowland regions of the South. A rapid succession of crops, whether of vegetables or of silk, such as we witness among what are in Bengal termed “ monthly worms,” is obtainable only, whether naturally or artificially, in a mild climate favourable to the rapid growth of vegetation. To the preservation of such species, when in a state 296 Captain T. Hutton on the of natural freedom, the healthy condition of the mulberry leaf until the commencement of the winter months is indispensable, and such a condition of things is obtainable only in a warm and probably humid climate. At Mussooree in the North-Western Himalaya, nature herself speaks forcibly in support of this view when she presents for our consideration twelve wild species of the Bombycide, eleven of which are here strictly annuals, and one only is double-brooded, though some of these in warmer parts of India are found, even in the wild state, to yield two and even three broods. Meditating on this fact, it occurred to me that if this could be relied uponas a distinguishing feature, the annual domestic worms would doubtless, on investigation, be found to be specifically dis- tinct from the so-called “monthly worms,” and ‘the result has proved the correctness of this view, the Cashmere and Bokhara Annual being not only distinct from the Bengal Annual (Boro- pooloo), but both are distinct from the “ Nistry,” the ‘* Dasee,” and the small Chinese species Cheena, which are distinguished as monthly worms. Were they not specifically distinct, why do not the annuals when cultivated in Bengal become monthly, like the others? or, again, why do not the monthlies become annuals in the North? By their not undergoing these changes we are furnished with proof that it is not a change of climate which makes the alteration, but that nature has stamped them with distinctive characters and habits. We have all read or heard of complaints in regard to the un- certain quality of the silk sent as that of Bombyx Mori to Europe from Bengal, and that it is on that account held in less estimation than silks from other countries, This variation in quality arises from the cultivation of these several distinct species under the name of B. Mori, precisely as all Eria silks were sup- posed to be derived from Attacus Cynthia. ‘These worms being of different sizes and always much smaller than the larve of B. Mori (which species by the way is not cultivated at all in Bengal), must necessarily produce a silken fibre of far greater fineness than it; from which it results that not only is the reeled silk much finer than that of the true B. Mori, but each Bengal worm differs from the other in the thickness of its fibre, and as all goes home nomi- ually as the produce of the same worm, no wonder that an outcry is raised about the uncertain thickness of the fibre. This discovery of several distinct species confounded under the name of B. Mori, although admitted by competent judges in Europe, has in India been sneered at, and the differences percep- Restoration of the Silkworm. 297 tible in the size, colour, markings and habits of the worms, and the form and texture of the cocoons, have been attributed to the effects of climate only. Climate, however, has no such influence, since we find each species, in whatever climate cultivated, preserving the very same characteristics. If the differences at present perceptible were in reality merely the effects of climate and of peculiar treat- ment, we might surely expect that when a change of climate and treatment was experienced some marked and decided change would soon be perceptible in the insects likewise; but this is not the case, each retaining at Mussooree, in Oudh, and elsewhere in the Northern Provinces, the very same characteristics as when in the damp warm plains of Bengal. The characters, in fact, are constant, no matter where the insects may be. Characters, whether of form, colour or habits, if permanent and unchangeable, are to all intents and purposes specific characters, and even Mr. Darwin admits that when one of his supposed varieties attains to a certain degree of stability, it assumes, pro tem., the value and importance of a species until variation again commences at some after period among the offspring. Under any circumstances, therefore, these insects, whatever they may originally have been, having now severally attained to permanency of characters, have become true species, and as such must be accepted and described. Genus Bompyx, Schranck. The genus Bombyx appears naturally to divide itself into two well-defined sections or sub-divisions, the first comprising all the domesticated Chinese species of which the larve have hitherto been known to cultivators and men of science as being of a pale creamy-white colour, and furnished only with one fleshy or semi- horny sharp-pointed spine, springing from the dorsal centre of the penultimate segment; the other containing the wild and un- cultivated species, whose larve are not only richly variegated with a number of bright colours intimately mixed together, such as ashy-grey, livid-green, yellow, rufous, ferruginous and black, but are likewise furnished with from four to six longitudinally- disposed rows of fleshy-or semi-horny spines, all curving back- wards, besides one long one on the penultimate segment, placed between the two dorsal rows and pointing in the opposite direction. Of the insects contained in this last section, one feeds on the wild indigenous mulberry tree of the North-Western Himalaya, and yields a first-rate silk, which, however, cannot be turned to VOL. Il, THIRD SERIES, PART IV.—MARCH, 1865, Z 298 Captain T. Hutton on the much account, as the worm is too intractable to submit to domesti- cation, and can only be reared upon the trees in the open air, which of course renders the crop precarious, through the incessant attacks of birds and insects. This species was discovered by myself at Simla in 1837, but, owing to illness and the subsequent breaking out of the Afghan war, was not sent to Europe until 1842, when the moth was figured by Mr. Westwood in ‘ The Cabinet of Oriental Entomology,” under the name of Bombyx Huttoni. A second species occurs sparingly in Bengal, in the neighbour- hood of Calcutta, where it feeds on the leaves of the 4rtocarpus lacoocha, and to which I have assigned the name of Bombyx Ben- galensis. At Singapore, or in its neighbourhood, is a third species, called by Mr. Walker Bombyx subnotata, though nothing more than its existence appears to be known. A fourth species is found in Assam, where it feeds on the leaves of the Ficus religiosa or Peepul tree, and is distinguished as the Bombyx religiose of Helfer. And lastly, so far as continental India is concerned, the Bombyx lugubris of Drury is said to occur at Madras, though the state- ment appears to require confirmation, and Mr. Moore even doubts its being a Bombyx at all. These two sections of the genus Bombyx being remarkable for the presence in the one, and the absence in the other, of bright colours and rows of spines in the larve, led me to entertain a suspicion that the Chinese domesticated species are no longer in their original condition; and followiug up this idea by a series of experiments, I soon discovered that with respect to colouring, the Bombyx Mori, and one or two others, when partially reverted to a state of nature, show a great and marked approach in the dis- tribution and arrangement of their colours to the wild species of India. Besides the genus Bombyx, this group of the family contains the genera Ocinara of Walker, and Trilocha of Moore; of the former I have discovered two, if not three, new species, and I understand that others have been discovered in Bengal. In the Jarva state this genus, although showing alliance with Bombyz, appears likewise to approach the Geometre, the caterpillar gene- rally having, not only something of the manner of the latter, but possessing also several of those curious little excrescences which give a Geometer the appearance of a dry stick with withered buds. The larve of Ocinara spin a small neat cocoon resembling Restoration of the Silkworm. 299 that of some of the smaller Bombyces, but there is not silk enough to render them worth cultivating. ‘The larva of one of my Mus- sooree species, unlike the others, is hairy. Before proceeding further it may be well to observe that in France and Italy, where none but annuals can be cultivated, the same degree of uncertainty as to species appears to prevail; four varieties of Bombyx Mori are there distinguished from each other as follows :— First. The small silkworm of three casts or moults. Second. The large silkworm of four moults. Third. The common white silkworm of four moults. Fourth. The common yellowish silkworm of four moults. The eggs of the first of these are said to weigh one-eleventh less than those of the common silkworm; that is to say, that while 39,168 of the latter weigh an ounce, it requires for the same weight 42,620 of the smaller one. ‘The worms and cocoons are also said by Count Dandolo to be two-fifths smaller than those of the common sort. ‘ The cocoons, also,” he says, ‘ are composed of finer and more beautiful silk, whence it would appear that the silk-drawing tubes are finer in these silkworms.” ‘The cocoons are better constructed, and afford in proportion, at equal weight, a greater quantity of silk. ‘The worms, likewise, come to matu- rity four days earlier than the common sort. Six hundred cocoons weigh 13lbs. In the south of France, according to M. Boitard, this race is known as the Milanese worm, being common in Lom- bardy. With regard to the second variety we are told that it is culti- vated chiefly “dans le Frioul.” The difference in the weight of the eggs between this and the common sort, or fourth variety, is given as one-fiftieth only, that is to say, 39,168 eggs of the latter go to the ounce against 37,440 of the former, which are thus the heavier. One hundred and fifty cocoons weigh a pound and a half, while 360 of the common sort make the same weight. This variety requires five or six days longer to bring it to maturity. The third variety is said to have been imported from China by the inhabitants of the “arrondissement d’Alais,’ and is common both in France and Italy; it differs from the others in constantly producing white cocoons, the silk of which is said to be finer than that of the common sort. The fourth variety, which appears to have been selected as the standard of comparison, is the commonest of all and is cultivated Z2 300 Captain T. Hutton on the generally in France and throughout Europe. The cocoon is a yellow of different degrees of intensity. Now the question arises—Are these to be considered as merely local and climatal varieties of B. Mori, or can any of them be regarded as true and distinct species ? With regard to No. 1, it is said that although in Italy nine out of ten cocoons are white, yet that in France the majority are yellow. No stress, therefore, can be laid upon the colour of the silk as a specific character, but a valid mark of distinction would (if there is no mistake) appear to exist in the fact of the worm undergoing only three moults instead of four as in all the others. That this worm, however, is not in a healthy state is clearly to be seen in the change produced on the colour of the silk by change of climate, the heat of Italy producing white, and the cooler and more natural temperature of France producing yellow cocoons. But if this worm be a mere variety of B. Mori induced by climate, Count Dandolo’s remark that the greater fineness of the silk is attributable to greater fineness in the silk-drawing tubes, at once proclaims the unhealthiness and degeneracy of the worm, which has dwindled down from its natural size and is no longer able to yield a fibre of the original thickness. If then this is a mere climatal variety of 6B. Mori, the peculiarities in its moulting, and the changeable colour and fineness of the silk, can be attributed to nothing else than loss of size and constitution. If climate has been the agent by which this variation has been brought about, how is it that the entire race of B. Mori has not been affected in a similar manner? Yet in Italy, in France and in other countries of Europe, B. Mor: still continues not only to hold its ground side by side with this supposed variety, but is in spite of climate stated to be still the commonest of all. An Indian sericulturist rising from the perusal of Reports on the Culture of Silk in various parts of the country, will find perhaps that no two of these agree in the length of time consumed between the hatching of the egg and the spinning of the cocoon. The explanation is, that the reports do not all apply to the same species, for at Madras and in Bengal proper, the true B. Mori is nowhere found, and it has only very recently been tried, and with no very encouraging success, in the North Western Pro- vinces of Upper India. But the time that elapses between the hatching of the egg and the spinning of the cocoon will vary even in the same species, according to the temperature in which the worm has been reared, and likewise, in some measure, accord- Restoration of the Silkworm. 301 ing to the health of the insect. Asa rule, the whole process will be more rapid in a high temperature than in a colder one, and it is to be observed that the longer the time consumed, the better in general will be the cocoon, for the simple reason that the worm has had ample time to come to maturity, whereas when the growth is forced and accelerated by high temperature, although the worm may grow to a goodly size, it will still have passed through its different stages so rapidly as materially to diminish the quantity of silk-gum, which it has not had time to secrete. The cocoon will, consequently, be less stuffed with silk than when, all other things being equal, a longer time has been con- sumed, Count Dandolo lays it down that thirty-two days elapse between the hatching of the egg and the formation of the cocoon, and he adds four days more for the completion of it, or thirty-six days in all. This likewise is the time given by M. Boitard as applicable to the worm in France. Dewhurst informs us that in England forty-six days are consumed. In China, according to published accounts, the time varies greatly, being from twenty- three to twenty-eight and sometimes forty days, with an additional seven days allowed for the cocoon, so that we have thirty, thirty- five and forty-seven days given as the time. Contrary to all experience also, it is said that the shorter the time consumed, the more abundant will be the crop of silk, twenty-three to twenty-five days producing twenty-five ounces of silk from one dram’s weight of newly-hatched worms ; twenty-eight days yielding only twenty ounces, and thirty to forty days producing no more than ten ounces. ‘This is clearly an absurdity, for it shows that the longer the worm continues to secrete gum, the less silk will it produce. Dr. Anderson, as quoted by Dewhurst, says that in Madras twenty-two days only are required; while Mr. Cope of Umritsir gives twenty-eight to forty days, but whether for the Punjab or elsewhere is not stated. At Mussooree I have found the time consumed by B. Mori to run from forty-six to forty-eight days. At Lucknow in Oudh, Dr. Bonavia gives “ about forty-six days” for B. Mori, and seventeen for the small Chinese monthly worm in the month of June, and fifty-one days in November. It is evident that these statements cannot all apply to the same species. In France and in Italy, in England, Oudh, the Punjab and Mussooree, the reference is to the annual Bombyx Mori, known in Europe as * The common silk worm of four moults,” and in India as the Cashmere or Bokhara worm, The time, therefore, consumed by B. Mori in France and Italy is about thirty-six days; in England, Oudh, Punjab and Mussooree about forty-six days. 302 Captain T. Hutton on the Mr. Cope, in a Lecture on Silk delivered at Lahore, gives (as before mentioned) from twenty-eight to forty days as the time consumed. If B. Morispins its cocoon in twenty-eight days from the time of hatching, a stronger proof of the total unfitness of the Punjab climate for the culture of that species could not be furnished. The fact, however, is that the time laid down in the lecture cannot satisfactorily be applied to any species in particular, but evidently includes more than one. The Chinese account likewise would appear to have reference to more than one species, while in Madras, the species referred to by Dr. Anderson was in all probability one of the three monthly worms, because the true B. Mori is nowhere cultivated below the North Western Provinces. The true time consumed from the hatching of the worm to the completion of the cocoon would, consequently, appear to range from thirty-six to forty-six days, and the more rapid progress made in Europe is probably to be attributed to the fact of the worms being shut up in rooms with a temperature of 68° to 77°, which is altered after every change of skin, Thus, Dewhurst says, ‘75° is the degree of heat they should be kept in until the first casting or moulting; between 73° and 75° until the second moulting; between 71° and 73° until the third ; and lastly, between 68° and 71° until the fourth moulting.” From this statement we perceive that, according to this writer, the temperature should be reduced as the worm advances to maturity, a procedure which is diametrically the reverse of that pursued by nature. According to the same authority “it has been proved by a series of experiments that in France 68° is the heat most suitable to silkworms ; some cultivators have raised it as high as 77° with good success, while M. Boisseur de Sauvages has even gone as high as 100°.” At Mussooree I have always reared the worms in an open room, so that, as the external temperature varied, that of the interior varied likewise, and the air was always fresh and natural. The eggs hatched spontaneously in a mean temperature of 64°, and the thermometer never rose beyond 68° up to the time of spinning the cocoon. During the same time the daily mean of the external temperature ranged from 47° to 66°, so that the French view of the matter is thus proved to be the most correct. 1 have shown, moreover, (ante, p. 152,) that 1 found great difficulty in checking the hatching of the eggs even in a temperature of 53°, and only did so at last by placing them out all night in the frosty air of December, at an elevation of 5,400 feet. Restoration of the Silkworm. 303 The small Chinese monthly worm (B. Sinensis) required in the month of June, in the warm climate of Oudh, no more than seven- teen days from the hatching of the egg till the formation of the cocoon, while, in the cooler temperature of November, fifty-one days were consumed. At Mussooree, the same species, hatched on the 26th of June, spun the cocoons in twenty-eight days; while the Boro-pooloo (B. tertur), which was hatched on the 14th of March, began to spin on the 28th of April, consuming thus forty-six days, or the same as B. Mori. This circumstance, together with the similarity in the marking, and the occurrence of black worms in the brood, has led Dr. Bonavia somewhat hastily to conclude that the Cashmere worm and the Boro-pooloo are one and the same species, an error into which he could scarcely have fallen had he given due weight to the fact that not only is the worm a full inch shorter than that of the Cashmere worm, but the size, colour and texture of the cocoons are all totally distinct, and no naturalist could ever confound the one with the other. ‘These differences, moreover, are permanent, even where the species are cultivated together, and the occurrence of black worms merely shows that the Boro-pooloo, like B. Mori, has completely lost its constitution. Black worms are also occa- sionally found in the broods of the Nistry (B. Creest), which is undoubtedly distinct. If, then, we unite all the species under the one name of Bombyx Mori, we shall find that the time consumed from the hatching of the egg to the spinning of the cocoon will vary in the same climate from seventeen to forty-six days, a circumstance which is alone sufficient to point out the incorrectness of such an arrangement : while if we more reasonably insist upon there being several distinct species now confounded together, the difficulty at once vanishes, and the difference at present observable is satisfactorily accounted for. I shall, therefore, now proceed to unfold my views on this subject, and show, from the peculiarities observable in each species, upon what grounds I insist upon specific distinction. 1. Bomsyx Mort, Linn. Synonymes. Phalena Bombyx Mori, Linn. 8. N. 1, 2, p. 817 (1767); Ameen. Acad. iv. p. 563; Faun. Suec. p. 832; Aldrov. Ins. p. 280; Albin. Ins. pl. 12, f. 16; Reaum. Ins. ii. p. 5, f. 2; Reesel. Ins. iii. pl. 78. 304 Captain T. Hutton on the Bombyx Mori. . Fab. Spec. Ins, i. p. 180; Mant. Ins. ii. p. 114; Ent. Syst. iii. 1, p. 431; God. Lep. de France, iv. p. 153, pl. 14, f. 3,4; Walker, List Lep. Het. Brit. Mus. pt. 6, p. 1505; Moore, Cat. Lep. Mus. Ind. House, ii. p. B74. Sericaria Mori . . Blanchard, Gay, Hist. de Chile, Zool. vii. p- 55. Lasiocampa Mori . Schranck. Lasiocampe du Murier Boitard, p. 148. The common domesticated Chinese silkworm of Europe. Alabitat.—Originally the northern mountainous provinces of China, especially that of Tche-kiang; now domesticated in China generally, in Cashmere, Afghanistan, Bokhara, Persia, Syria, France, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Russia, &c., and recently intro- duced into Oudh and the Punjab. The species termed by the late Dr. Royle “ Pat major ” refers not to this, but to the Bengal Annual known as Boro-pooloo, while that mentioned by Dr. Helfer in the J. A. S. B. vi. p. 41, as cited in Mr. F. Moore’s “ Synopsis,” probably refers to one of the monthly worms which have hitherto passed under the name of B. Mori, a species which, at the time when the Doctor wrote, was confined to Cashmere, and was certainly not cultivated in any part of Bengal or the Lowland Provinces. The word “ Pat” appears to be used as a generic term. Larva.—Originally from the Northern parts of China, the worm of Bombyx Mori is now extensively cultivated for its silk, in various countries both of Asia and of Europe, and everywhere thrives best where the temperature is moderate. It is the largest and the strongest of the domesticated species, and is an annual, producing naturally but one crop of silk in the year, although in certain temperatures it is possible to make it produce a second crop. When first excluded from the egg the young caterpillar is hairy and of a dark-brown colour, the edge of the anterior segment being ashy white ; the head and prolegs are shining jet black. In the course of four or five days the five anterior segments become slightly swollen, exhibiting a mottled appearance of brown dots and small patches on a livid ashy ground, and previous to the first moult these segments become altogether livid ashy, while the others are of a pale brown; there is one short tubercle or spine on the middle line of the penultimate segment, and the hairy ap- Restoration of the Silkworm. | 305 pearance of the young worms is owing to short tufts of hairs springing from rows of rudimentary tubercles as in the wild and uncultivated kinds. These, however, all disappear, with the exception of the anal spine, after the first moult. In the second stage, the four anterior segments are of an ashy white, the dorsal portion of the second and third segments being swollen and wrinkled ; the remaining segments are pale brindled, or mottled grey, with a slightly mealy aspect; a short, blunt, somewhat flat-sided, semi-horny tubercle on the dorsal centre of the penultimate segment, and having generally a faint tinge of orange; on the fifth segment are two faint semilunar brown marks like inverted commas, and on the eighth segment are two small round spots of brown; head and prolegs black. After the second moult the insect becomes altogether of an ashy or creamy whiteness, the second and third segments still more swollen and wrinkled; on the front of the second segment is a thin longitudinally disposed dark line with generally a small dark spot on each side of it; two dark semilunar marks on the back of the fifth segment, and the dark spots on the eighth slightly raised ; anal horn pointed and somewhat suddenly attenuated, with an inclination to point backwards; head mealy grey-brown, and small as compared with the rapidly increasing size of the body. In the two following stages there is usually no alteration, except that the length and thickness of the worm rapidly increase, and that the markings become more conspicuous, that on the fifth segment often assuming the form of a crown. The feet are fringed with minute cilia. The entire body is without hairs and quite smooth; the stigmata or breathing apertures along the sides are small, round and dark, and in the last stage of growth the two dots on the front of the second segment increase in size and are partially rufous. The length of a full grown worm, cultivated at Mussooree, is from 3 to 33 inches. Such is the appearance of the worm as now cultivated (Pl. XIX. fig. 8), but in almost every batch of worms there will be seen after the first moult has occurred, some dark-coloured ones which at the first glance appear to be a distinct species. By the French these worms are regarded as a mere evanescent variety and are distinguished as “ vers ligrés” and “ vers zébrés ;” so far, however, are they from being a mere passing variety that they are actually types of the original species, and merely require to be treated according to the established rules of breeding in order to render them permanent and healthy, 306 Captain T. Hutton on the The Black Worm. (Pl. XIX. fig. 7.)—When first hatched the caterpillars are in all respects similar to those of the pale variety, and it is not until after the first, and sometimes second, moult has taken place that any difference is perceptible; then, however, instead of having the four anterior segments of a creamy-white, the whole body is ofa dark-brindled or mottled-grey colour, with the exception of an ashy band or broad stripe, which, crossing in front of the an- terior segment, runs round on each side as far back as the middle of the fifth segment, widening up towards the back, but leaving a dark-brindled dorsal space between them; at a later stage, when the worm is near maturity, this ashy band becomes less clear and bright, and is often tinged faintly with clay colour, or even with a fleshy roseate hue; on the fifth segment the two dark lunules are well defined, and have an ashy patch between them ; the dark spots on the eighth segment are sometimes wanting, as they are also in the white variety. In the third and fourth stages the colouring generally becomes very dark, in some intensely so, and takes the form of a net or trellis-work spread over an ashy-grey ground. As the worm ap- proaches the spinning time the colours again become fainter, and often assume a grey sandy-brown hue overlaid by the dark net- work. The anterior portion of the second segment rises some- what abruptly, and from it, through the dorsal centre of the first, runs a narrow black longitudinal line, on each side of which, on the second segment, is a round black spot, perpendicularly divided by a pale orange line, causing the appearance, as it were, of two eyes. Such is the appearance in the first year of the separation from the white worm; the differences in after years, of course, become more marked, though the general character is the same. After two or three years of separation and restricted inter- breeding the appearance, especially in the middle stages, is very dark indeed, and the whole insect looks as if overlaid by a well- distended net, the meshes of which are open and well defined ; it is, indeed, this well-defined marking, together with the ashy lateral band along the anterior segments, which makes the species ap- proximate to the wild races, the lateral band more especially being a characteristic of the wild worms. Progress of the Experiment.—In the previous part of this paper (ante, pp. 149—153) I have shown the result of my experiments up to the end of 1863. I now proceed to show the condition of Restoration of the Silkworm. 307 the worm in the spring of 1864, when the eggs deposited in the spring and autumn of the past year began to hatch on the 21st of March in a temperature of 65°. . First, then, with regard to the white worms, it was observed that, although for two years running the black worms had been all weeded out from them, yet the per-centage of dark worms was far greater than before; showing thus, according to the expe- rience of cultivators, a great accession of strength and health; great numbers of the eggs likewise adhered firmly to the paper on which they were deposited, instead of being loosely scattered as heretofore, but the white worms have never yet produced a second crop. This variety, though far from being in the best health, showed no increase of degeneracy over previous years. With regard to the black worms, they hatched on the same day with the others, although some had been deposited in spring and others in the autumn of 1863. All were decidedly unhealthy, although those from the autumn batch were far less so than those of spring, the latter being so terribly affected with jaundice, and with some disease that turned the worm dull green, that I was compelled to throw the whole away. The worms from the autumnal batch went on well enough and spun good cocoons, the moths from which deposited a goodly number of eggs in the end of May, and these began to hatch for a second crop in September, 1864. They are apparently healthy, and from a few of their eggs I shall carry on an experiment for amusement, but I feel fully persuaded now, after several years of observation, that the con- stitution of the worm has been so thoroughly undermined that, although we may be able to restore it to its natural appearance, it will never be able thoroughly to shake off the various diseases to which it has so long been subject. The only way open to the sericulturist is, therefore, to re-seek in the original habitat in China for the wild worms in their natural state of freedom on the trees, and should any of these be procurable, then may the entire stock in Europe be gradually renewed, and the present impending ruin be averted. Dr. Bonavia of Lucknow, the active and enterprising secretary to the Agri-Horticultural Society of that province, having in the spring of 1864 furnished me with a few eggs obtained from Mar- seilles, I proceeded to ascertain whether they differed from the Cashmere worm or not. These began to hatch, in a temperature of 67°, on the 4th of April, when the Cashmere worms were already fifteen days old; in the batch were a few of the dark coloured ones, but none, 308 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of whether dark or white, appeared to be healthy; still they were not worse than their congeners, and eventually spun better co- coons, being, although not so large, much more stuffed with silk. Between these worms and those from Cashmere stock there is not a shade of difference, both being B. Mori. Imago.—In the moth the ground colour of the wings is a dull ashy white; sometimes they are entirely ashy, without any lines or other markings, while some have only two short parallel lines on the fore-wings near the centre of the costal margin. In others there are lines as below described, but no colours. These are from the white worm as now cultivated. The appearance of moths produced from black worms ap- proximates more to the wild B. Huttoni, both in colour and in markings. In these the ground of the wings is still ashy, and the male, as usual, is smaller than the female, having the shaft of the antenne white, with dusky black plumes; eyes black; body and ground of wings ashy-white, suffused with a pale brown tinge; near the basal angle of the fore-wing are two parallel lunate lines, the horns of which point inwards and rest upon the anterior and posterior margins; between these lines darkish brown, in some instances blending them into a brown band, in others the lines are clear and distinct; about the middle of the costal margin, at a little distance within the wing, are two very short parallel lines slightly curved in the opposite direction to the basal ones; these, how- ever, are sometimes absent; across the wing, from the anterior to the posterior margin, are two partially parallel submarginal lines at a little distance apart, the inner one being a slight curve and the outer one taking a bend or lunate sweep near the exterior and posterior angle; these lines are sometimes distinct and clear on the ashy ground, at others they are blended into a dark-brown band by the deep suffusion of the space between them. Fore- wing strongly falcate in both sexes; the hind-wing is rounded on the exterior margin ; abdominal margin folded down as in Ocinara, with one blackish spot about the middle; from the anterior to the abdominal margin are two subparallel lines through the dise of the wing, curving parallel to the outer margin, sometimes distinct, at others blended by the suffusion of the inclosed space with brown. The female is much the same, but there is in both sexes the greatest variety in the markings, which is, I think, a clear indication that the insect is not in a natural condition or sound state of health. The under-side dull ashy, with the dark lines and bands visible, as above. The male often exhibits ashy wings, with brown bands, Silk-producing Bombycide. 309 and the body dark grey. Expanse of wings in the female 2 inches; in the male 1? inches, although the size varies as much as the colouring. 2. Bompyx TExToR, Hutton. Syn. Bombyx Mori of Indian sericulturists. The Boro-pooloo of Bengal; “ Pat major” of Royle. This species, hitherto confounded with the preceding, is said to have been introduced from China, where it is still cultivated, under the name of the white cocoon, but the time of its introduc- tion into India appears to have been forgotten. In Bengal, as well as in its native country, it is an annual, hatching early in the spring, usually in January, yielding generally pure white cocoons, far inferior in size to those of B. Mori, and altogether of a different shape, character and texture, having an inclination to become pointed at each end, and with the silk not closely interwoven, but externally somewhat flossy and loose, whereas the cocoons of B. Mori are closely woven, compact, hard and smooth, ovate in shape, and four or five times“ larger; some that I have received from France being little inferior in size to those of the Tussur moth (Antherea Paphia). The worm, when mature, bears a strong resemblance to that of the preceding species, but is much smaller both in length and thickness, and, as a strong mark of distinction, it may be observed that it preserves all its characteristics unchanged, even when cul- tivated in the same climate and in the same manner as B. Mori, neither of the species exhibiting the slightest indication of adopting the peculiarities of the other. In Dr, Bonavia’s Report on Sericulture in Oudh for 1864, he remarks of B. textor,—‘‘ I cannot find any reason to believe that this worm belongs to a different stock from the Cashmere and Bokhara worms ;” others have said the same thing, which only proves to me that they have never looked beyond the worm itself, since had they done so they might have found, as I have done, abundant proofs of specific distinctness. The same gentleman proceeds to inform us that— Captain Hutton favoured me with a small quantity of eggs of his selected dark-coloured worms. According to his views the dark-coloured variety approaches more to the wild kind, and therefore has more healthy blood in it than the white variety, which he considers as a degeneration of the original worm. It is strange though that the ‘ Boro-pooloo,’ which has been reared in Bengal for a long 310 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of time, contains a large number of the dark variety. One would be inclined to think that, considering the bad mode of rearing and the climate of Bengal, it would have degenerated into the white variety by this time, according to Captain Hutton’s theory.” The writer, however, shows, by the admission that “a large number of the dark variety’ occurs amongst the Boro-pooloo worms, that “ Captain Hutton’s theory” actually does hold good. Just as with the originally dark-coloured worms of B. Mori, so also the originally dark-coloured worms of B. textor “ have dege- rated into the white variey.” ‘The occurrence of these dark worms, as I have pointed out (ante, pp. 148 et seq.), is due to an effort on the part of nature to return to the original stock, from the sickly degenerated state into which the species have fallen. Again we are told that, “the selected dark-coloured worm of Mussooree did very well, but I could not detect any difference between the cocoons of these and those of the white Cashmere ones. I selected many of the black ones of the Cashmere, Bok- hara and ‘ Boro-pooloo,’ and kept them separate, but did not find that they produced better cocoons than the rest, and they all had one disadvantage, that is, on account of their colour, it was not easy to discover when they were ready to spin.” Be it observed, however, that in furnishing these dark-coloured worms, I did not guarantee the same results in Oudh as are ob- tainable in the European climate of Mussooree. I should not have been at all surprised to hear, considering the heat of Oudh and the inexperience of the conductor of the experiments, that every worm had returned to a state of sickly whiteness. As to the difficulty of discovering when they were ready to spin, this could only have occurred to an unpractised eye, since there is always a semi-transparent yellowish waxy hue about a mature worm that is quite unmistakeable to an experienced eye. According to Mr. C. Blechynden and Mr. Bashford, this species is the one that in Bengal is recognized as “ The Italian Stock ;” in which case it would appear to be identical with that which in France is termed “ The Milanese worm,” though if such be the case, how are we to account for its only undergoing three moults in France and Italy, while in India it invariably has four, like all the others? I incline very strongly to the belief that this alleged peculiarity is altogether fabulous. In Bengal, according to Mr. C. Blechynden and others, the worm is also sometimes dark coloured like those of B. Mori, thus showing clearly that it is not in its original healthy state; the Silk-producing Bombycide. 311 worms attain a length varying from 2 to 23 inches, as is the case also at Mussooree. As regards the colour of the silk, nothing could more strongly support my view that white is a sign of weakness and degeneracy. In Italy, we are informed, there are generally nine white cocoons in every ten,—but when cultivated in France bright golden yellow is the predominant colour; this is undoubtedly an effect of climate, showing that the warmth of Italy is less adapted to the health of the insect than the cooler temperature of France, which in some districts is nearly the same as that of Mussooree, where precisely similar results have been observed. The eggs of this species, hatched in March, 1864, from the deposit of May, 18638, gave seventy-eight black to thirty-one white worms, in a batch of 109, whereas in 1868 eggs procured from Bengal produced white worms without a single exception. The cocoons spun in 1863 by the Bengal worms were all white, with the exception of about half a dozen, whereas in 1864 there was not one white cocoon, all being of a bright golden yellow. In China, as in Bengal, the usual colour is white, with an exceptional sprinkling of yellow cocoons. Here we have the effect of climate distinctly marked, and showing that while a high temperature produces both white worms and white silk, a temperate climate, by impart- ing strength, produces dark worms and yellow cocoons. The worm which in France gives permanently a white cocoon, and which was imported from China into the ‘ arrondissement d’Alais,” would appear to be distinct both from B. textor and the other two varieties; so that if No. 1, or the Milanese worm, be our Boro-pooloo, as I suspect is the case, and Nos. 2 and 4 are true B. Mori, then No. 3, with the permanent white silk, is in all probability a distinct species. The changes in the appearance of the caterpillars of B. textor are precisely similar to those observable in B. Mori, and need not be repeated; when first hatched, the worms of B. textor are rather black than brown, and alihough in the after stages there is in the colouring and marking of the two species no really tan- gible and well-defined distinction, yet at the same time there is to the eye a perceptible difference in the shade of colouring, which is darker, more prononcé, more equally diffused, and more of a neutral tint in B. texlor than in B. Mori; the latter, besides attaining to a far larger size and forming a totally different cocoon, has the dark parts less purplish and not so generally diffused. These remarks, however, pertain to the black worms only ; the white ones differ in no respect except in size. SZ Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of Having now disposed of the Annuals, we have to consider the question of distinction with regard to what are commonly termed ** Monthly worms.” 3. Bompyx Cres, Hutton. Syn. Bombyx Mori, var., of Indian sericulturists. The “ Nestry,” and “ Madrassee” worm of Bengal. This is a much smaller species than either of the preceding, yielding seven or eight crops of silk in the year; the cocoon is small, of a beautiful bright yellow colour, and of a somewhat loose and flossy texture. It is said to thrive best in the summer months from June to October, and at other times is only kept up to preserve the stock. In hot weather it goes through all its changes from the egg to the cocoon in twenty-five days, but in the colder months it occupies thirty-five days. The worm is from 13 to 2 inches long, and is of a clear silvery or pearly hue, having a moist dewy appearance. The anal spine is short and truncated, and the dark lunar marks, which are so conspicu- ous on the fifth and eighth segments of the two annuals, are in this species wholly wanting. It is said never to yield white cocoons, but that dark worms occasionally appear in the brood. I suspect this to be the “¢ Pat minor’’ of Helfer and Royle. 4, BoMByx FoRTUNATUS, Hutton. Syn. Bombyx Mori, var., of Indian sericulturists. The ‘“ Dasee” worm of Bengal. (PJ. XIX. fig. 3.) This is the smallest species of the whole, and is said to be hardy, but the yield of silk is uncertain; there are no dark worms among them, and they thrive best in the cold season, oc- cupying at that time from the egg to the cocoon about forty days, but in hot weather only thirty-three days. The silk is of a golden yellow, and the cocoon small ; it resem- bles that of B. Creesi in form and texture. When near maturity there is a very marked and perceptible difference between this species and all the others, the worm being of a bluish leaden-grey throughout; the ocelli or Junate marks on the fifth and eighth seg- ments are wanting, as in the last; the anterior segments are slightly intumescent and wrinkled; a short pale spine on the penultimate segment. The eggs are small, and pale straw colour, remaining so until within a day or two of hatching, when they become leaden-grey. Silk-producing Bombycide. 313 5. Bompyx ArRACANENSIS, Hutton. Syn. Bombyx Mori, var., of Indian sericulturists. The Arracan worm. When first hatched, the Arracan worm is very small ; of a pale sandy-brown colour, and hairy, like all the others; anterior edge of the first segment whitish, or livid ash; head black. I succeeded only once, many years ago, in obtaining a few eggs of this species, through the kindness of Mr. Blechynden, secre- tary to the Agri-Horticultural Society of India, a gentleman whom I have uniformly found ready to assist in every useful inquiry. The worms produced from these eggs were very feeble, and, refusing to feed, were all dead by the evening. The cocoon is said to be larger than those of the Bengal monthly worms, and the silk strong and good. The worm is supposed to have been introduced from Burmah. 6. Bomsyx Srnensts, Hutton. Syn. Bombyx Mori, var., of Indian sericulturists. The small Chinese monthly worm. Sina” and “ Cheena” of the Bengalis. The worm of this prolific species is considerably smaller than that of B. teator, and the cocoon partakes much of the same cha- racters, being sometimes white and sometimes bright yellow, with occasional cocoons of a beautiful faint greenish-white. The mark- ings of the mature insect are very different from those of the Boro-pooloo, and from all the others. Eggs received from Bengal began to hatch on the 26th of June ; head and pro-legs jet black and shining: the body hairy and pale brown, with minute anal horn. On the 30th of June these worms motlted, the head and pro- legs being black as at first ; the four anterior segments pale ashy, the second and third gibbous and wrinkled; the remainder mottled ashy-grey ; a short blunt conical spine on the penultimate segment. ‘There are also two longitudinal dorsal rows of minute round black dots, four on each segment, and giving out minute hairs; on the fifth segment are two semi-lunar brown marks, the horns of which point inwards, as in L. Mori; the anal tubercle with a few short cilia at the summit, and behind this, on the anal segment, are two minute tubercles placed close together like the sights on a gun, and behind them again lower down, and on the anal shield or valve, are two others ; stigmata black. VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART IV.—MARCH, 1865. AA 314 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of After the second moult, the appearance is much the same, the head and pro-legs being black ; the four anterior segments ashy ; remainder mottled iron-grey ; stigmata black; lunules as before on fifth segment, and two small black dots on the front of the second segment. On the 9th of July the third moult was completed, the head having changed to ashy-white; the body entirely ash-coloured ; two small black dots in front of the second segment, and two on the posterior part of the third; two lunules or sickle-shaped dark marks on the fifth segment, composed of two narrow dark curves enclosing one of ash; on the eighth segment are two small brown circular spots ; in other respects as before, and still very small ; stigmata a black ring with white centre. On the 15th July the fourth moult was completed, the worm being of a faint waxy colour with grey-brown head ; the two dots on the front of the second segment now give place to a transverse bar with a dot at each end. Two dorsal and two lateral rows of small tubercular brown dots. The marks on the fifth and eighth segments as before, but darker and more conspicuous ; stigmata a black ring with white centre. After the fourth moult the worm increases rapidly, and finally attains the length of 2.3, inches. On the 22nd July they began to spin, and the cocoons were generally of a fine bright golden-yellow, although white cocoons were far from uncommon. The form and loose flossy texture of the cocoon is the same as that of the Boro-pooloo, but those of the latter are larger. In the spinning of the cocoon there was an immense waste of silk, arising, I suspect, from some unhealthiness, as the worms were restless and wandering, beginning a cocoon in one place, and then leaving it to seek a fresh spot, which was per- haps in turn abandoned, until sometimes all the silk was thus frit- tered away, and the worm either died or became a naked pupa. On the 4th of August the moths began to issue from the cocoons, and coupled ; they were very small and altogether ashy- white, without any markings on the wings. The moths showed the presence of disease in having black inky spots upon the wings and beneath the skin of the abdomen at the junction of the segments ; still they coupled freely and laid a plentiful supply of eggs, which were at first nearly white, but changed to pale yellow in the course of a few hours. The coupling continued for about ten hours, when they volun- tarily separated. The males appeared to be somewhat sluggish, and the females in most cases, after the first coupling, would not permit a second. Silk-producing Bombycide. 315 On the 16th of August the eggs, although still of a pale straw- colour, became somewhat dusky and exhibited the black head of the young caterpillar within the shell. On the 17th these eggs had become grey and of good colour. On the 18th they all hatched in a swarm, and I found that, unlike B. Mori, which ceases to hatch about midday, these continued to come forth during the entire day and night, until all were ex- cluded. When first hatched they are about 1, of an inch long; and after the first moult 3; inch; after the second moult 8, inch ; after the third moult 1,3, inch; and at maturity just before spinning 2.3, inches. I observed a curious fact with regard to some of these eggs that were Jaid on the 5th of August,—about 20 of them turned vinaceous on the 10th, while all the rest of the brood remained in statu quo. These coloured eggs were not scattered about among the others, but formed a small group by themselves. They did not hatch with the others, but remained in the same vinaceous state until the 3rd of October, by which time the others were again laying eggs. Yet I could perceive no difference in the worms afterwards, although there had been an interval of 30 days between the hatching of the two parties laid on the same day. This species continued to yield crop after crop even up to the middle of December, when many of the cocoons remained dormant, while others yielded moths which laid eggs that remained un- hatched, the weather being very cold and variable, and no leaves remaining on the mulberry trees. Here I think we have a clear proof that at least this monthly worm could never have inhabited a northern climate, but must by nature be entirely restricted to warm lowland regions in which mulberry leaves are procurable all the year round. It appears from some remarks of Mr. C. Blechynden that it was to this species and not to the Nistry (B. Crees) that allusion was made in Young’s Magazine of Agriculture, as quoted by Kirby and Spence, and the same gentleman observes that the name given to the species by the natives is “ Sina” or Chinese. He remarks as follows :—“ The worm mentioned by Kirby and Spence does exist and is known as ‘ The China worm ;’ it goes through all its changes from egg to cocoon in twenty-two days ; so it is nothing strange to have new progeny in a month. The period may be shortened by two or three days if the room occupied as a rearing-room is kept at a high temperature ; it breeds all the year round, but in the cold weather is longer in going through its AA2 316 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of mutations and does not thrive well. This might be obviated by keeping the room warm, but we should be thrown out by the want of leaves, the mulberry putting on its wintry garb of bare branches.” This information was kindly furnished from the Radnagore district, but it is equally applicable to all others in India, the time occupied from egg to cocoon varying always with the temperature in which the worm is reared, being, as with the other species, more rapid in a high than in a cold temperature, as witness Dr. Bonavia’s experiments in Oudh, seventeen days in June and fifty- one in November. Mr. Blechynden’s remarks as to the worms thriving better in summer than in winter tend to support my opinion that the monthly worms belong naturally to the more genial temperature of the south, while the annuals only belong to the colder mountainous regions of the north. It is also said of this worm that “ yellow cocoons will produce insects that give white silk, but that insects from white cocoons never produce yellow.” Here then is a cor- roboration of my previous argument that white is a sign of de- generacy and weakened constitution. From what has already been said, then, I think ample proof has been furnished of the existence of at least six species of domes- cated Bombyces, instead of one as heretofore supposed. Before passing on to a consideration of the wild species I would say a word respecting the hatching of the eggs of B. Mori for a second crop: at Mussooree, where this was first observed, we have in effect what may be termed a double season, or two springs, so that when after the rainy season the temperature falls back to from 68° to 62°, the eggs will again begin to hatch. I have observed this both in B. Mort and B. textor, but I am inclined to think that it will only occur with worms in a transitional state, that is to say, before they have become acclimatised ; and that as soon as this has been effected the irregular hatching may be expected to cease. For three years my worms of selected b. Mori, or the dark kind, have given a second crop; but the very attempt to cause them to revert may have had some effect in unsettling them, for the white variety | have never found to yield a second brood. With B. textor the same thing occurred, and for three or four years they continued to give an autumnal crop; this year, however (although B. Mori is now in September hatching in a temperature of 68°), the Boro-pooloo remains unhatched, although in previous years the hatching commenced about the 22nd of August, a full month earlier. I expect, therefore, that B. Mori will eventually likewise settle down again into an annual, That the hatching is in some Silk-producing Bombycide. 317 measure to be attributed to the alteration of climate seems proved by the fact that the Boro-pooloo removed from Bengal into Oudh began to hatch for a second crop in the month of April, but was checked by being placed in a colder temperature. (Dr. Bonavia’s Report, 1864, p. 8.) Of the moths of the different species I have said nothing because I do not consider any one of them to be in a natural state; at present, with the exception of size, the same description would apply nearly equally well to all of them; and it is to be observed, moreover, that, even taking each species separately, there will be found a very great variety among the moths, so that it would be next to impossible to decide as to which was to be regarded as a typical specimen. Pale ashy-white, with a brownish band run- ning parallel with the exterior margin of the upper wings, is the usual appearance, although the band is often either partially or altogether absent. This uncertainty must be attributed to the un- settled condition of the insects, and will never cease until each is restored to something like its original vigour of constitution. Wild indigenous Species of India. Turning now to the wild species of Continental India, we are at once struck by the fact that, instead of being exclusively restricted in their diet to the mulberry leaf, as are the domes- ticated worms from China, one only of the four known species is found upon that tree, while two of the others are respectively restricted, it would appear, to the Ficus religiosa and Artocarpus lacoocha, the food of the fourth species being unrecorded. Besides this peculiarity, the wild species are remarkable for the variety and beauty of the colours with which the worms are ornamented, as well as by the presence of several longitudinally- disposed rows of semi-horny spines in addition to the dorsal spine on the penultimate segment, as possessed by all the Chinese species. These natural differences in the two sections of this group are not, however, in my opinion, sufficient to warrant the inference that the wild and the domesticated species belong to different genera, any more than the presence or absence of tails, in the species of the genus Papilio, could do so; for we see that in respect to colour, the Chinese worms, when restored to some degree of health, exhibit a very different appearance from that of the worm in its usual sickly state, and that they actually make a near approach to the uncultivated species. Besides which, there are so many traits in the habits, manners, structure and 318 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of produce of the two sections that are common to both, that the differences observable can be regarded only as specific and not generic; and although the food of the wild species differs in some instances from that of the domesticated races, yet in every case the trees are found to belong to the same family, and to be closely allied to the mulberry. I consequently feel inclined to reject the Genus Theophila, which Mr. F. Moore (see Trans. Ent, Soc., 3rd Series, 1. 315) proposes to establish for the reception of the wild species ; more especially since it is very doubtful whether one at least of these could stand under either Bombyx or Theophila, while as regards B. subnotata of Singapore, we know nothing of the larva, and therefore cannot say whether or not it exhibits the spines and other characteristics of the known wild larve; and the same may be said of B. religiose. It is this eagerness on the part of European systematists to give names to the species contained in the Noah’s arks over which they preside, that leads to so much positive confusion as to what is, and what is not, a species,—a remark well illustrated by the late creation of an Antherea under the specific name of Mezankooria (see Trans. Ent. Soc., 3rd Series, i. 318), which name is applied in Assam, by the native sericulturists, to distin- guish the silk of the Mooga (Antherea Assama), when fed upon the tree called Addakoory, from that produced by it when fed upon other trees. A very similar mistake, at which the working naturalist may, without offence, be permitted to smile, was recently made by a French savant of some repute, who applied to me for information regarding certain alleged species of Tussur moths, known in India as Antherea Teriah, Anth. Dabrah, Anth. Mooga, and several more, these being, not the names of insects, but technical terms applied by the native cultivators of Beerbhoom to particular qualities of cocoons of Antherea Paphia, which are assorted according to size, colour, &c., under these various titles. It would appear that while one school is labouring hard to prove that all organized beings are the descendants of ‘ one primordial type,” others are equally bent on proving that each species is sui generis, and entitled to stand alone. 7. Bompyx Huttoni, Westw. (PI. XIX. fig. 4.) Syn. Bombyx Huttoni, Westwood, Cab. Or. Ent. pl. 12, f. 4. Theophila Huttoni, Moore, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 3rd Series, 1. 314, 315. This species, which feeds on the wild indigenous mulberry tree of the North Western Himalaya, is apparently confined to the Silk-producing Bombycide. 319 mountains, from the neighbourhood of Delia, at about 2,000 feet of elevation up to 7,000 and even 8,000 feet. It does not appear to occur in Nipal, but ranges westward from about Kemaon. This worm is double-brooded, and yields two crops of silk in the year ; this is of the very best quality, but unfortunately the worm is so erratic and intractable, that hitherto all attempts to domesti- cate it have proved abortive; it will not remain in the feeding trays, like the Chinese worms, but wanders away until the brood is lost. The only method of rearing it is to leave it at full liberty on the trees, where it remains perfectly quiet and con- tented, but has so many enemies to contend with, in the shape of birds, flies, bugs and wasps, as to render a crop of silk very precarious and almost unattainable, without constant watching and expense, which renders the crop unprofitable. As previously stated, I discovered this species at Simla in the autumn of 1837, on the wild forest mulberry, and again after the campaign in Afghanistan, at Mussooree in 1842, at which time I sent it to Mr. Westwood, in England. The wild mulberry-tree of the North Western Himalaya usually comes into leaf about the first week in March, but of course this is in a great measure dependent upon the situation, elevation and temperature of the season. The eggs of this silkworm are firmly attached to the bark of the tree, sometimes on the trunk, but more generally on the underside of the branches, where they remain spread out in clusters and exposed all the winter to the action of the frost, but where they are at the same time protected from the rain and snow, so as to run no risk of being washed off by the dissolving of their agglutinating gum. The colour of the egg is a pale straw-yellow, which, unlike the eggs of the Chinese races, is retained to the last. The egg is considerably larger than those of 6, Mori. The young worm is disclosed from the egg a few days after the opening of the leaf- buds; the hatching is, however, very irregular and continues sometimes even up to the end of April, although this is generally dependent upon the situation of the tree. In some seasons these worms are so numerous that the trees are completely denuded of every leaf by the middle of May, and in such cases the worms, after gnawing off all the leaves which envelope the cocoons already formed, are compelled to descend from the tree and spin among the leaves of the neighbouring shrubs and bushes, while many that are still immature necessarily die of hunger, or fall a prey to birds. The trees that have been thus denuded speedily put forth fresh leaves, to be in due time consumed ay Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of by the autumnal brood. Trees thus stripped in the middle of May will be again in full foliage by the end of the first week in June. It is curious to observe the instinctive knowledge which these worms appear to possess of the approach of a hail-storm; no sooner are the peals of thunder heard, than the whole brood seems to regard them as a warning trumpet-call, and all are instantly in motion seeking shelter beneath the thicker branches, and even descending the trunk of the tree to some little distance, but never proceeding so low down as to lose the protecting shelter of the boughs. For rain they care nothing, but appear to be able to distinguish between the coming of a heavy shower, and the more pitiless pelting of the hail. When the caterpillar is newly hatched its appearance, as seen under a good lens, is as follows :—Head and pro-legs shining jet black ; body dark brown, approaching to black ; the first segment whitish-ash, the fourth pale rufous, as are the anal feet; tubercles disposed in longitudinal rows, giving forth short tufts of hair; a small anal tubercle on the penultimate segment: thus far there is scarcely a difference between it and the young Chinese worm. Length fully 1 of an inch: strong and robust, as compared with the best domestic stock. In the course of a day or two, the four anterior segments become greatly swollen and of a faint livid cream- colour, the dorsal portion being mottled or dotted with deep brown; the orange or rufous colour of the fourth segment some- what deeper. About the fourth day the four anterior segments become swollen up very remarkably into a globular form, the dark spots being apparently beneath the skin; the rest of the body dark brown, with here and there a tinge of dull yellowish. On the fifth day they prepared to moult. After the first moult, the second and third segments form a globular ball, apparently out of all proportion to the rest of the body; the general ground colour becomes creamy- white, with the fourth segment yellow, the second and third being dotted above with dull leaden-grey ; the remainder closely marbled over, or variegated without any definite arrangement, with black, grey, orange, ash and yellow blending like tortoise-shell; the fleshy tubercles or spines short, conical and brown; skin smooth. In the subsequent stages the general appearance remains the same, except that the spines are long and taper to a point, being fleshy at the base, but becoming somewhat horny towards the summits; all bend backwards in a curve except the central one on the penultimate segment, which lies down horizontally and points forward. Silk-producing Bombycide. 321 When mature the ground colour becomes yellowish-white beautifully and closely marbled over with orange, dark ash-grey, leaden blue and brown; the second and third segments swollen into a large globose mass ; the anterior segment creamy-yellow, which colour extends backwards on each side in a broad band through the sixth segment. This resembles the ashy band apparent in the worm of &. Mori, after reversion to its natural dark hue. There are two dorsal rows of long, black, slender and sharp-pointed spines commencing with the fifth segment, their base being orange- brown, and the four anterior segments being without them, as in Attacus Atlas; on the anal shield are four somewhat conical orange-brown rudimentary tubercles, and rows of small ones along the sides ; the dorsal portion of the four anterior segments clouded or blotched with dull leaden-grey markings, apparently showing from beneath the skin; on the third segment are two brown spots or ccelli, marked within with several minute irregular dots of bluish-white; on the front of the second segment are two similar round spots, having a narrow edge and central dot of bluish-white ; there are likewise several black spots both before and behind these ocelli; on the fifth segment are two irregular- shaped jet-black spots dotted with bluish-white, and from the centre of these springs the first pair of dorsal spines, which are altogether black : head mottled brown and grey. It is, however, almost impossible accurately and minutely to describe the distribution and blending of the various colours with which the insect is ornamented. The cocoon is spun within the leaf from the beginning of May to the end of that month, according to the time of hatching, but I have sometimes taken cocoons as early as the 15th of April and again in September. The figure of the moth, as represented on pl. 12 of Westwood’s Cabinet of Oriental Entomology, is, in several respects, very faulty, owing to the specimen sent to him having been injured during its long journey. Expanse of wing in the male 1? inch; of females in general 23, inches. A black transverse band crosses the upper part of the abdomen at the waist, the posterior edge of which is bordered by a narrow line of ash; on the reflected abdominal margin of the hinder wings are two white spots; all the markings on the wings are of the same character as those upon the wings of B. Mori, but are far better defined and more intense than those in West- wood’s figure. On the hinder wings the sub-marginal line is ash-coloured, as is also that on the upper wing. The plumes of 322 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of the antenne are likewise much longer than in the figure, which, taking it all in all, is very inaccurate. In order if possible to reclaim this species and reduce it to a state of domestication, I succeeded in 1859 in obtaining a reci- procal cross between it and the Cashmere worm. In this experi- ment the female wild moth was coupled with the male B. Mor, and the female B. Mori with the male B. Huttoni; the coupling of the latter was effected with the greatest difficulty, and the few eggs obtained were all unprolific; this always proved to be the case in repeated trials. With regard to the other attempt, the difficulty was not so great, the domestic males eagerly sought the wild females ; the latter, however, exhibited an unmistakable dis- like of such pigmy sweethearts, though a few coupled and de- posited eggs. Still very few of these were prolific, and the cater- pillars produced from them retained all the intractable habits of the wild stock, and were accordingly placed upon the trees, where in due time they spun their cocoons. But neither in the cater- pillar nor in the cocoon was there any perceptible difference from the wild race, and although some of these females were again crossed by hybrid males, the progeny was still to all intents and purposes as decidedly B. Huttoni as at first. From the refusal of the wild males to couple, and from the great difficulty experienced in inducing the females to allow the domestic males to approach, it may be said that a generic division would be justifiable ; yet a certain coupling did take place and the progeny was fertile, although the strength and health of the wild race completely outweighed the influence of the degenerated domestic stock. It was with a view to the eventual cultivation of the silk of this species that, after a lengthened correspondence, the Government of India in 1858 consented to the formation of a mulberry plan- tation at Mussooree under my superintendence, but having fully satisfied myself in the course of the second year, that from the intractable nature of the worm it would be impossible to domes- ticate it, the Government was only too glad to foreclose the ex- periment, while I having purchased the only tract of land suitable and available for the experiment, was left to ‘‘pay the piper’ on the plea that the purchase had never been ordered ! 8. Bomsyx Bencatrensis, Hutton. The Wild Bengal Silkworm. (PI. XIX. fig. 5.) This species has apparently become exceedingly rare, if not extinct, in the neighbourhood of Calcutta, where it feeds on the Silk-producing Bombycide. | 323 Artocarpus lacoocha, and was discovered some years ago by the late W. Frith, Esq., of Calcutta, who showed me specimens of the moth in 1849, but stated that the worm fed on the mulberry tree and was not uncommon about Moorshedabad. ‘The moth, however, which he then showed me was totally unlike one pre- sented by Mr. A. Grote, being larger and of a brown colour. Can there be an undescribed species at Moorshedabad ? Of B. Bengalensis I have never been able to procure the eggs, although Mr. Grote has interested himself in the matter; he now reports that for the last year or two the species has disappeared. It is probable, however, that it might still be procurable in other parts of Bengal where the bread-fruit tree flourishes. From a well-executed coloured drawing of the larva, furnished through the kindness of this gentleman, I am enabled to record its appear- ance as follows:—Head brown; from the head to the middle of the sixth segment ashy white or cream colour ; the second and third segments wrinkled and slightly intumescent, bearing a few small rufous spots; prolegs rufous brown, with blackish tips; from the middle of the sixth segment to the anal feet pale rufous-brown, each segment dotted with black ; stigmata oval white rings, with a black centre; on the dorsal portion of the fifth segment are two slightly raised round black spots, from the centre of which radiate narrow white stripes, and from which rise the first or anterior pair of dorsal spines, which are wholly black ; on the eighth segment are two similar spots of a rufous-red colour with white rays, and bearing two black spines ; all the other segments bear black dorsal spines, with rufous bases; the spine on the centre of the penultimate segment very large and strong, thick at the base or lower half, and becoming suddenly attenuated and falcate, pointing back- wards, the tip only black, the rest pale rufous; the dorsal spines are represented as standing erect. Legs rufous-brown, each bearing a pointed whitish stripe down its centre. The four an- terior segments smooth and without spines. In point of size it appears to be far inferior to the larva of B. Hultoni; the four anterior segments make no approach to the globular mass which characterises that part in the Himalayan species, neither does it at all resemble it in the colouring. The moth as furnished by Mr. Grote is of an ashy-white, and the cocoon that of a true Bombyz. 324 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of 9. Bombyx supnotata, Walker. Syn. Bombyx subnotata, Walker, Proc. Linn. Soc. Lond. iii. Zool. p. 188 (1859). Of this species nothing more appears to be known than is con- tained in Mr. Walker's description of the moth (wbz supra), and that it was procured from Singapore by Mr. A. R. Wallace ; neither the larva nor its food are mentioned. In the absence of all information regarding the caterpillar, whether it is spined, like the two preceding, or smooth, as in the Chinese stock, it is impossible to decide upon the propriety of placing this species in the proposed new genus Theophila. 10. Bomspyx Horsrietp1, Moore. Syn. Bombyx Horsfieldi, Moore, Cat. Ind. Mus. ii, pl. xi.a, fig. 5. This is not a Continental species and is merely inserfed here to complete the series; the moth is described and figured in the Catalogue of the India Museum, but here again we know nothing of the larva, cocoon or food. Its habitat is Java. 11. Bomsyx Suerwitu, Moore, MS. Syn. Bombyx Shernilli, Moore, in epistold. Of this again the larva is unknown, and indeed the habitat is doubtful too. According to Mr. F. Moore the specimen was obtained from a collection said to have been made in the S. E. Himalayas by the late Major J. L. Sherwill; but Entomologists who have long collected in that quarter assure me that they have never seen a specimen of Bombyx from thence. Nevertheless, this is but negative evidence; and if once a specimen has been obtained others may probably follow. According to Mr. Moore it is “allied to B, Huttoni, and differs from it in being somewhat larger, and of a greyer colour, the forewing having the apical patch fuliginous instead of black, and it has only a single trans- verse discal streak (instead of the two, as in B. Huttoni). A most prominent character is that the abdomen is tipt with black, as well as having the dark ashy waistband.” Large light-coloured specimens are sometimes seen of B, Hut- toni, but I do not remember ever to have seen the abdomen tipt with black. Silk-producing Bombycide. 325 12. Bompyx reticiosz, Helfer. Syn. Bombyx religiose, Helfer, J. A. S. Beng. vi. p. 41. Bombyx Huttoni, apud Moore, Cat. Ind. Mus. The Joree Silkworm Moth, Helfer. The Deo-mooga Silkworm, Hugon, J. A. S. Beng. vi. pp. 32, 41. Habitat Assam, Sylhet. Of this species, notwithstanding the number of years that have elapsed since its discovery, and my repeated efforts to obtain it through the assistance of gentlemen resident in Assam, nothing more appears to be known than what Dr. Helfer recorded in 1837. It issaid to be somewhat rare, but this I suspect is rather to be attributed to the want of research than to any actual scarcity, since the insect appears to have been in considerable abundance on the trees at the time when its discovery was made. The larva of B. religiose is said to feed on the leaves of the Peepul tree or Ficus religiosa, and for want of more recent infor- mation I must content myself with the account furnished by Dr. Helfer (ubi sup.), calling attention to the fact of the worm bearing two names,—‘ The Joree” and ‘The Deo-mooga” silk- worm, whence, together with one or two other circumstances to be pointed out, I am inclined to think there are two species united under this name, and that neither of them belongs to the genus Bombyz. It is to be observed that the species was discovered in Cachar by Mr. Hugon in 1834, and he describes the worm as being active, very slender in proportion to its length, scarcely 23 inches long, of a reddish colour, and glazed, or shining. The moth, he says, is “very much like that of the mulberry; so is the cocoon also in appearance, colour and size.” Now in describing the worm there is not the least allusion to the slender semi-horny spines which are so remarkable both in B. Huttoni and B, Bengalensis, while the slender glazed form is again unlike those species, and seems to approach more closely to the genus Ocinara. In regard to the cocoon, while Mr. Hugon declares it to be very like that of the mulberry worm, “ in appearance, colour and size,” Dr. Helfer, on the other hand, declares it to be “ very different from the cocoon of the mulberry moth.” It is to be remembered, however, that Mr. Hugon spoke of an insect which he discovered in Cachar, while Dr. Helfer describes one discovered by Major Jenkins in Assam, where “it yields a 326 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of silk, if not superior, yet certainly equal, to that of B. Mori, [? B. textor, or B. Croesi, probably]. The cocoon shows the finest filament, and has very much silky lustre. Itis exceedingly smooth to the touch, and very different from the cocoon of the mulberry moth. The worm lives on the Pipul tree (Ficus religiosa).” It seems to have been entirely overlooked that Mr. Hugon in Cachar found his worms on “ the Bur-tree (Ficus Indica),” and that “in appearance, colour and size,” they were very like the mulberry worm; while Major Jenkins in Assam found his on an allied, but still a different tree, “ the Pipul (Ficus religiosa),” and the cocoon was “ very different from that of the mulberry moth.” Is it not quite possible that there may be two distinct species, the Deo-mooga of Cachar, and the Joree of Assam? What renders the uncertainty still greater is the fact that Mr. Hugon himself “ was unable to determine whether the Joree and Deo-mooga were the same, and was inclined, from the colour of the cocoons and the slight observations he was able to make on the latter, to think them distinct.” My own opinion, judging from what has been advanced, and from the fact that the cocoons are said to be less even than those of the Dasee (B. fortunatus), is, that neither the one nor the other belongs to Bombya, but will be found to be species of the allied genus Ocinara, an opinion supported in some measure by the nature of the food, these insects feeding on two species of Ficus, just as our two mountain species at Mussooree are confined to the Ficus venosa. Genus Ocinara, Walker. The insects of this genus, although in some respects allied to Bombyx, show likewise in the larva state a strong approach to the Geometre, being characterized by knotty and dry bud-like ex- crescences, which, with the rigid attitude assumed when at rest, give the insect the appearance of a withered twig or piece of dry stick. In those discovered at Mussooree the larvee appear to. be almost entirely night-feeders, seldom moving during the day from the position they have taken up, which is usually at the end of a thin twig, along which they lie stretched out immovable, and to which they are so much assimilated, both in colour and ruggedness of appearance, as easily to pass unnoticed. 1. Octnara Moorer, Hutton, The larva of this species feeds on the Ficus venosa, and is found at Mussooree at an elevation of about 5,400 feet ; it spins a small Silk-producing Bombycide. 327 white silken cocoon on the inner surface of the leaf, or even, should it fall from the tree, under a tile or stone, or against a flower-pot. There are certainly two broods during the summer months, and I suspect as many as three or four. The larva is of an earthy-brown colour, and covered with short hairs ; it has a raised transverse ridge across the second segment, in front of which is a blackish patch ; it has a very short truncated spine on the middle of the penultimate segment, which usually lies down pointing backwards, and even with the plane of the back ; it is, however, capable of being raised into an erect position when the insect is disturbed. The general appearance is rough and bark-like, and the ventral line is thickly fringed, as are the feet also, with rather long hairs. The moth, judging from the description given by Mr. Moore of his species O. Lida, appears closely allied to it, and were it not that he makes no mention of the three black spots on the ab- dominal margin of the lower wings, of a black dot on the disc beneath, and gives palpi ferruginous instead of dusky black, I should have been strongly tempted to consider them as identical. The wings in both sexes are of a creamy white, partially suffused with a faint ferruginous tinge; an indistinct undulating sub- marginal line bearing a ferruginous mark on each nervure, the largest being on the costal margin ; abdominal and outer edges of the wings well fringed with long cilia, forming a well-marked border ; an indistinct sub-basal wavy line with one or two in- distinct ferruginous dots on the nervures; on the hinder wing is a wavy, very indistinct pale-brown band at about one-third from the margin; the fringe of the lower wings terminates in a pro- jecting square patch, caused by the turning down or folding of the remaining portion of the abdominal margin, on which are three ferruginous dots. Body tricarinated, or having a dorsal and a lateral line on each side composed of tufts of long scales of a triangular form, and appearing like a projecting serrated line ; colour very faint ferruginous, or sandy brown, very little darker than the wings. Antenne bipectinated and faintly tinged with ferruginous ; thorax, and forehead between the eyes, white ; eyes, palpi, and inner side of forelegs, dusky black; under side ashy white, the wavy brown bands and spots well defined, and there is a black dot on the dise of the lower wings ; body beneath whitish. Expanse of wing in the male 13 inch, in the female 2 inches. The silk of this species is fine and elastic; the cocoon oval, flattened beneath where in contact with the leaf, convex above; it is enveloped in a light screen of floss silk, spread over it in 328 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of curls, and not web-like as in Bombyx. The cocoon is too small to become valuable. I have taken cocoons both in May and in August. The larva is usually found stretched along a thin branch, to which it clings very closely, and is scarcely distinguishable from the wood. 2. Octnara LacTEA, Hutton. (Pl. XIX. fig. 6.) The larva of this species feeds likewise upon the Ficus venosa, at the same place and elevation as the last, and is often found with it on the same tree. It appears to be a far more abundant species than the former, and is usually found stretched along the extreme end of a twig, and so close that it appears to be part and parcel of the branch; at other times it will be found obliquely erect and stiff so as to resemble a dry stick. When very young it resorts also to the edges and back of the leaf. It is without hairs, and quite naked. The young worm is of a pale-yellowish green, resembling the leaf-stalk upon which it rests; on the back of the second segment is a slightly raised transverse ridge tinged with brown, and on the fifth and ninth segments are two slightly- raised round tubercles of the same colour; an anal horn, on the penultimate segment, which is also light brown. When adult, the colour changes to a russet brown like the bark of the tree, and the transverse ridge and tubercles become well developed and somewhat darker than the rest of the body; the anal horn or spine generally appears as if truncated by the loss of the summit, —yet such is not the case, as the extremity is retractile, and is generally withdrawn into the lower part as a sheath; when the animal is about to moult, or is disturbed and irritated, the sum- mit of this spine is exserted, and instead of being brown, like the base, is whitish; when exserted the whole stands erect, slightly inclining backwards. It would be a difficult task to explain the use of this curious contrivance, and | have been hitherto unable to detect anything that could lead me even to conjecture what purpose it can possibly serve. The shape of the larva is similar to that of O. dilectula, as figured in the second volume of the Lepidopterous Insects in the India Museum, except that in the figure of the latter there are no raised tubercles. From the larva of the preceding species it differs both in shape and habits. In O. lactea the entire form and appearance are those of a Geometra, but it nevertheless progresses in the usual way like the larva of Bombyx. In its manner of stretching from the twig to an adjacent leaf while feeding, and in its habit, when at rest, Silk-producing Bombycide. 329 of folding the prolegs together and obliquely raising all the anterior segments of the body, as far back as the sixth, off the surface of the twig or leaf, and at an acute angle with the plane upon which it stands, it very strongly resembles a Geometra, and gives one the idea of its forming a connecting link between that curious genus and the Bombyces. It feeds principally at night like the last, and in its younger stages is usually found at the extreme end of a young leafy twig, the terminal bud of which it strongly resembles. It spins a small compact cocoon, shaped like that of the last, but of a sulphur-yellow colour instead of white, and the flossy web which covers it is more closely woven into a kind of network, with regular open circular meshes, The eggs are at first of a very pale straw yellow, and are deposited in short lines of three to eight in each; after a time a red dot appears in the centre of the egg, and then, in a day or two more, the entire egg changes to a dark stone-grey, and the young worm speedily emerges. The moth is small and white, often with the wings partially hyaline and iridescent, though this, I am inclined to think, arises from the abrasion of the scales, which are very loose and easily rubbed off. The upper wing has an indistinct and nearly obsolete submarginal and slightly undulating double line, with a minute black dot on each nervure, and a larger one on the costal margin flanked on each side by a smaller one. About the middle of the costal margin, at a little distance within the wing, is a black spot formed by two short parallel lines close together, and an almost obsolete double-curved line near the basal angle, running from the anterior to the posterior margin; both the wings are rounded ex- ternally. The lower wing has also an obscure brownish sub- marginal line without dots; a small black dot on the disc, which however is not always present, and three well-defined black spots on the fringe of the abdominal margin, which, as in the foregoing species, is folded down. The under-side is dull white, with the discal spots and submarginal lines more clearly developed than above. Eyes and palpi black; antenna with white shafts and ferruginous plumes: body densely clothed with long hair-like scales; upper surface of body smoky ash-grey; thorax and forehead between the eyes white. Throughout July and August the larve of this species are abundant at an elevation of 5,400 feet on the Ficus venosa, which the natives term “ Doodli,” from the milky nature of its juices which exude freely when a leaf is plucked. In the female of this moth VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART 1V.—MARCH, 1865. BB 330 Captain T. Hutton’s Characters of there is a dorsal keel, serrated, and composed of long scales. Expanse of female 1,6, inch, of male 1,3, inch. 38. Octnara Comma, Hutton. This occurs in the Dehra Doon at the foot of the mountains, where the moth is said to be usually found on the Mango tree, but it has not yet been ascertained whether the larva feeds upon its leaves or not. The moth is white, both in wings and body, with a single comma-like black mark about the centre of the anterior margin of the upper wing and at a little distance from the margin; under- side also white, with the comma mark a little less distinct, and on the centre of the hinder wing is a very faint indication of a black spot; antenne bipectinate, the shaft white, with faint ferruginous plumes ; the face and palpi dull yellowish; the two anterior pairs of legs each bearing two black spots on the outer edge; expanse of wing in a female 1-9; inch. Appears in July and August. Besides these, I am informed that other Continental species have been captured at Darjiling, but to these at present I have no access. There are likewise two species from Java, noticed by Mr. Moore in the second volume of the Lepidoptera contained in the India Museum. ‘These are— 4, Ocinara pivectuta, Walker. Syn. Ocinara dilectula, Walker, List Lep. Het. Brit. Mus. pt. vii. p. 1768 (1856); Moore, Catal. Lep. Ind. Mus. ii. p. 381. Habitat Java, where procured by the late Dr. Horsfield. Like the species at Mussooree it is said to “ feed upon a species of Ficus, bearing the native name of Weringin.” This circum- stance seems to point out the species of Ficus as the natural food of the genus, and makes me still more inclined to regard the Bombyx religiose@ as belonging in reality to Ocinara. 5. Octnara Lipa, Moore. Syn. Ocinara Lida, Moore, Cat. Lep. Ind. Mus. ii. p. 381. This is likewise a Javanese species discovered by Dr. Horsfield, but nothing is recorded of the larva or its food. The moth is described in the above-named publication, and appears to be closely allied to my O. Moorez. Silk-producing Bombycide. 331 Genus Tritocna, Moore. 1. Trinocua vartans, Moore. (PI. XIX. fig. 1 2, fig. 2 9.) Syn. Trilocha varians, Moore, Cat. Lep. Ind. Mus. ii. p. 382. Naprepa varians, Walker, List Lep. Het. Brit. Mus. pt. v. p- 1153 (1855). This species, which is figured in vol. ii. of the Catalogue of Lepidoptera in the India Museum, is said to have been presented by J. N. Ward, Esq., from Canara, but nothing more is recorded ; the figure given by Mr. Moore (ubi sup.) looks wonderfully like an Ocinara. Nore.—The larve here figured (Pl. XIX. figs. 1,2), which I believe to be those of the male and female (the moths of both being also figured in the ori- ginal drawings from which these are copied) were discovered in the neighbour- hood of Caleutta, by Mr. A. Grote, by whom they were kindly forwarded to me. They were found in February and March, feeding on Trophis aspera, other larvee being also taken on Ficus indica and F, religiosa. Spins a small yellowish-white cocoon, within the leaf or naked. Drawings of the same insect in all its stages were made by Mr. Walter Elliot during his residence in Madras, the larve there also being found on Ficus religiosa.—F. Moore, February, 1865. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIX. Fig. 1. Larva of Trilocha varians, g. 2. ” ” ” fo) . 3. an Bombyx fortunatus, 4. 5 Bombyx Huttoni. 5. De Bombyx Bengalensis. 6. 3 Ocinara lactea. 7 i Bombyx Mori, reverted. 8 “ ¥ » as Cultivated, e"33an) XV. Descriptions of new Genera and Species of Phy- tophaga. By J. S. Baty. [Read 6th February, 1865.] Pantocometes Downesii. Glyptoscelis eneipennis. = JSascicularis. y albicans. Myochrous Sallei. = explanatus, Yr armatus. Corysthea ferox. Lamprospharus (n. g.) Hebe. + 5-pustulatus. FF lateralis. PA scintillaris. Chalcoplacis (n. g.) sumptuosa. Chalcophyma (n.g.) cretifera. a leta. re tarsalis. ea tuberculosa. Endocephalus spilotus. Colaspis elegantula. Sophrena (n. g.) ornata. Crepidodera elegantula. - Brasiliensis. Aphthona merens. Fam. List of Species. Celomera ruficornis. ” ” leta. bipustulata. Diabrotica coccinea. ” pulchra. puncticollis. sublimbata. Deyrollei. tenella. suturalis. Hebe. discoidalis. 4-vittautay dimidiatipennis. Saundersi. subsulcata. tetruspilota. Uroplata 12-maculata, ” ” ” ” Walkeri. Stevensi. Grayi. terminalis. 16-guttata. CLYTHRIDE. Genus Crytura, Fabr. 1. Clythra (Pantocometes) Downesit. Elongata, subcylindrica, czeruleo-viridis, nitida, subtus dense, supra sparse pube grisea vestita; thorace transverso, angulis posticis ]ate rotundatis, lateribus anguste flavo-marginatis ; elytris distincte subremote punctatis, pube suberecta sparse vestitis, fulvis, fascia transversa pone medium cerulea. Mas.—Capite exserto, infra oculos prolongato, mandibulis pro- ductis, acutis, intus fortiter lobatis, facie rugosa; thorace lateribus rotundatis, antice convergentibus, disco sat profunde transversim excavato, subremote punctato; pedibus anticis longissimis. 334 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of Foeem.—Capite brevi, infra oculos non prolongato, mandibulis brevibus; facie levi; thorace lateribus basi rotundatis, hinc ad apicem convergentibus, disco minus distincte transversim excavato, pedibus anticis non elongatis. Long. # 4, ¢ 33 lin. Hab. Bombay. Collected by E. Downes, Esq. Fam. EUMOLPID &, Genus Gryrtoscetis, Leconte. 1. Glyptoscelis ceneipennis. Elongatus, parallelus, subcylindricus, obscure rufus, nitidus, pilis albidis adpressis dense vestitus; antennis pedibusqne pallidioribus, thorace transverso, sat crebre punctato, lateribus rotundato-angustatis ; elytris viridi-zeneis, inordinatim punc- tatis, transversim rugulosis, singulis apice productis, acumi- natis, pilis fulvis et albis intermixtis vestitis, his hic illic in fasciculis parvis congregatis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Venezuela, Trinidad. 2. Glyptoscelis fascicularis. Elongatus, parallelus, subcylindricus, obscure piceus, supra pilis fuscis, subtus pilis albidis adpressis dense vestitus; pedibus obscure rufis, antennis rufo-fulvis, ad apicem infuscatis ; thorace vix transverso, lateribus fere rectis a basi ad apicem convergentibus, minus crebre punctato, disco vittis quatuor pilorum pallidorum, duabus internis antice abbreviatis, ornato; elytris parallelis, apicem versus vix angustatis, singulis apice paullo productis, acuminatis, inordinatim punctatis, trans- versim rugulosis, obscure viridi-zeneis, pilis fuscis et albis intermixtis vestitis, his hic illic fasciculatis. Long. 4 lin, Hab. Columbia. a This insect is easily separated from the foregoing by its some- what larger size, different coloration, and by the fuscous pubes- cence of the upper surface of the body; the pale vitte on the thorax are only visible in fresh specimens. 3. Glyptoscelis albicans. Elongatus, subparallelus, subcylindricus, piceus, non metal- licus, pilis adpressis obscure albidis dense vestitus, ely- trorum pilis squamiformibus; antennis pallide fulvis, pedibus New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 335 rufo-testaceis; thorace subcylindrico, latitudine vix longiori, lateribus fere rectis, a basi ad apicem angustatis; elytris crebre punctatis, singulis apice vix productis, acutis. Long. 4 lin. Hab. (A Genus Myocnrous, Erichs. 1. Myochrous Sallei. Elongatus, angustatus, parallelus, subcylindricus, dorso depla- natus, rufo-piceus aut piceus, squamulis adpressis albo-fuscis dense vestitus; antennis pedibusque pallide rufo-testaceis, genubus tarsisque obscurioribus ; thorace elongatulo, lateribus obsolete tridentatis, cylindrico, basi subdeplanata, apice an- trorsum valde porrecto; elytris fortiter punctato-striatis; tibiis anticis intus ante apicem spina brevi armatis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Mexico. Thorax more than a third longer than broad, sides not dilated, armed with three very minute teeth; anterior margin strongly produced, entirely concealing the head from above. This pretty species may be distinguished from M. explanatus by the narrower body, and entirely different form of thorax. 2. Myochrous explanatus. Elongatus, minus parallelus, convexus, dorso deplanatus, piceo- zeneus, squamulis fuscis dense vestitus ; antennis, labro, pedi- busque (genubus tarsisque exceptis) obscure rufo-testaceis ; thorace longitudine paullo latiori, margine antico sat valde porrecto, lateribus obsolete denticulatis, a basi ultra medium sat explanatis, ante apicem abrupte desinentibus; dorso antice convexo, postice deplanato; elytris minus parellelis, fortiter punctato-striatis; tibiis anticis intus ante apicem spina brevissima armatis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Caracas. Thorax rather broader than long, sides distinctly dilated, gradually diverging from the base to beyond the middle, where they abruptly terminate, their outer border furnished with three or four indistinct teeth ; sides of elytra slightly oval. 3. Myochrous armatus. Subelongatus, convexus, dorso modice deplanatus, obscure piceo-zeneus, squamulis adpressis fusco-fulvis dense vestitus ; 336 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of antennis obscure rufo-fulvis, aneo-maculatis; thorace Jatitu- dine vix longiori, lateribus distincte tridentatis, margine apicali antrorsum modice producto; elytris fortiter et rude punctato- striatis ; tibiis anticis intus ante apicem spin4 valida armatis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Brazil. Thorax scarcely longer than broad, sides moderately dilated, abruptly terminating before the apex, armed with three distinct teeth, anterior margin moderately produced ; upper surface trans- versely convex, slightly flattened at the base, closely and coarsely punctured. Elytra oblong-subovate, convex, scarcely flattened along the suture. Genus Corycra, mihi (olim). Since the publication of the above genus (Journ. Entom. ii. 221), I find that the word Corycia had been already used in Lepidoptera ; I therefore propose to substitute Corysthea as the generic name. Genus CorystTHEA. 1. Corysthea ferox. Oblonga, convexa, obscure cuprea, nitida; antennis pallide fulvis, ad apicem infuscatis; thorace elytris latitudine fere aquali, subcrebre punctato; elytris punctato-striatis, singulatim infra basin transversim impressis; tibils posticis spina valida armatis ( ¢ ). Long. 3 lin. Hab. Cayenne. Face coarsely punctured, forehead impressed with an oblong fovea, vertex smooth, nearly impunctate. Thorax about equal in width to the elytra, sides slightly rounded and subparallel behind their middle, obliquely converging in front ; above convex, anterior angles strongly deflexed, surface distinctly and somewhat closely punctured. Elytra slightly attenuated towards their apex, the latter regularly rounded; above convex, slightly deflexed from before their middle to the apex; basilar space in each elytron bounded outwardly by a perpendicular, and below bya transverse depression, the latter, however, not reaching to the suture ; surface finely but distinctly punctate-striate, the striae becoming some- what confused towards their apex. Body beneath smooth and shining, the middle portion of the metasternum entirely occupied by a large transverse concave depression; apical segment of abdomen transversely sulcate. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. Sue Genus Lamprospuxrvs, mihi (olim). In a paper in the Annals and Magazine of Natural History (1859, p. 124), I described some species of Eumolpide as belong- ing to the genus Lamprospherus, the characters of which, as then understood by me, I at the same time laid down; subsequent study however of the group has shown me that the insects then described belong to no less than three very natural genera, confounded by me under one common head. I propose in the present place to give briefly the diagnostic characters of these three genera, retain- ing for one of them my old name—Lamprospherus. Genus Lamprospu rus. Corpus breviter ovato-rotundatum aut rotundatum, valde con- vexum. Caput in thoracem insertum, perpendiculare ; an- tennis gracilibus, filiformibus, longitudine corporis breviori- bus. Thorax basi elytrorum latitudini fere equalis, margine laterali inferiori non incrassato; supra convexus, nunquam gib- bosus, lateribus muticis, basi aut rotundato-angustatis aut rotundatis, hinc ad apicem angustatis. lytra levia aut confuse aut subseriatim punctata, limbo inflexo obliquo. Pedes mediocres ; femoribus posticis muticis; unguiculis appendiculatis. Prosternum latitudine paullo longius, rarius transversum, sulcis suturalibus inter prosternum et episterna antica obsoletis ; episternt antici angulo externo antico ad thoracis angulum non producto. Type Lamprospherus collaris, mihi, (Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1859, p. 124). 1. Lamprospherus Hebe. Ovato-rotundatus, valde convexus, fulvo-rufus, nitidus; vertice, thorace, elytrorumque tertio postico viridi-zneis; antennis pedibusque pallide fulvis, tibiis posticis intus curvatis, apice acuminatis ; elytris seriatim punctatis ; abdomine medio piceo. Long 13 lin. Hab. Amazons. 2. Lamprospherus 5-pustulatus. Ovato-rotundatus, valde convexus, niger, nitidus; antennis pedibusque fulvis; abdomine, elytrorumque singulorum apice et pustulis duabus magnis, und basali, alter pone medium posita, rufo-testaceis. Long. 13 lin. Hab. Amazons. 338 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of Antenne slender, filiform; head and thorax distinctly but not closely punctured ; elytra more coarsely and deeply punctured, the puncturing arranged in irregular rows; striz near the lateral border sulcate, their interspaces subcostate. Hinder pair of tibize inwardly curved, their apex produced, acuminate. 3. Lamprospherus lateralis. Valde convexus, subrotundatus, postice paullo angustatus, niger, nitidus; thoracis lateribus late fulvis; pedibus nigro-piceis, femoribus tibiisque anticis obscure fulvis; elytris fortiter subseriatim punctatis, apice obsolete acumi- natis. Long. 12—2 lin. Hab. Brazil. 4. Lamprospherus scintillaris. Rotundato-ovatus, valde convexus, viridi-zeneus, nitidus, subtus obscurior; labro antennisque flavo-fulvis, his apice infuscatis ; thorace remote punctato; elytris eneis, sat fortiter sub- seriatim punctatis. Long. 2 lin. | Hab. Amazons. Genus Cuatcoptacts, Chev., M.SS. Corpus rotundatum, semiglobosum. Caput in thoracem pro- funde insertum, breve, perpendiculare ; antennis gracilibus, subfiliformibus, corporis dimidio paullo longioribus. Thorax transversus, latitudine elytrorum paullo angustior, margine inferiori laterali incrassato ; supra convexus, nunquam gib- bosus, lateribus integris, muticis. /ytra confuse subseriatim punctata, interstitiis levibus; limbo inflexo horizontali, plerumque concavo. Pedes mediocres, modice robusti ; femoribus posticis muticis; tibiis paullo compressis ; un- guiculis appendiculatis. Prosternum subquadratum, sulcis suturalibus inter prosternum et episterna antica obsoletis ; episterni antici angulo externo antico ad thoracis angulum non producto. Type Chalcoplacis abdominalis, mihi, (Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1859, p. 124). 1. Chalcoplacis sumptuosa. Subrotundata, valde convexa, nigro-cerulea, pedibus fulvis, supra aurea; antennis nigris, basi fulvis; elytris distincte New Genera and Species of Phytophaqa. 339 punctatis, utrisque infra basin transversim excavatis, lzeete purpureis, limbo inflexo leviter concavo. Long. 2 lin. Hab. Amazons. Epistome slightly depressed, subtrigonate, its surface granulose ; face broad, its lower portion slightly concave ; forehead impressed with a short, longitudinal groove; eyes black, their inner edge obsoletely notched; surface of head and thorax finely but sub- remotely punctured. Elytra rather more coarsely punctured than the preceding parts. Genus CuatcorHyMa. Corpus breviter ovato-rotundatum aut rotundatum, valde con- vexum. Caput in thoracem insertum, perpendiculare ; antennis gracilibus, filiformibus, corporis longitudini zqualibus aut paullo brevioribus. Zhorax transversus, elytrorum latitudini aqualis aut g etiam paullo latior, margine laterali inferiori incrassato; supra convexus, interdum gibbosus, lateribus rotundatis, plerumque dentatis aut emarginatis, rarius simplicibus. lytra irregulariter aut subseriatim punctata, seepe tuberculata vel costata, limbo inflexo obliquo aut subhorizontali, aut plerumque plano. Pedes subelongati, graciles; femoribus posticis subtus unidentatis, unguiculis appendiculatis. Prosternum subquadratum, sulcis suturalibus inter prosternum et episterna antica obsoletis; episterni antici angulo externo antico ad thoracis angulum non pro- ducto, Type Chalcophyma @ruginosa, mihi, (Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1859, p. 125). “1. Chalcophyma cretifera. Breviter ovato-rotundata, valde convexa, cuprea, subnitida, subtus nigra; pedibus obscure rufo-fulvis ; antennis pallide fulvis, extrorsum infuscatis; thorace rude rugoso, dorso bimamilloso, lateribus bidentatis; elytris rude punctatis, rugosis, cretis elevatis brevibus nonnullis longitudinaliter dispositis instructis. Long. 2 lin. Hab. Amazons. Head coarsely punctured, face impressed with a longitudinal groove, the surface on either side obliquely strigose ; antennz equal in length to the body, very slender, filiform. Thorax very coarsely rugose-punctate, sides armed about their middle with 340 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of two short but stout teeth; middle of disc strongly raised, the gibbosity being separated, by a broad longitudinal sulcus, into two mamillose protuberances; the bases of each surrounded by a broad ill-defined circular groove. Elytra even more coarsely rugose than the thorax: on their surface are numerous short, strongly elevated ridges, which are arranged in three or four lon- gitudinal rows. Four hinder thighs each armed beneath with a short tooth. 2. Chalcophyma leta. Ovato-rotundata, valde convexa, nitida, subtus zneo-picea, supra metallico-viridis ; antennis rufo-fuscis, his basi tarsisque fulvis; thorace lateribus rotundatis, ante medium angustatis, obsolete bidentatis, dorso convexo, ad Jatera crebrius, disco remote foveolato-punctato ; elytris fortiter sed remote punc- tatis, punctis substriatim dispositis, interstitiis planis, 1m- punctatis; femoribus quatuor posticis subtus obsolete uni- dentatis. Long. 14 lin. Hab. Amazons. Antenne slender, rather longer than the body; above bright metallic green, beneath zeneo-piceous, with a faint violaceous tinge. 3. Chalcophyma tarsalis. Ovato-rotundata, valde convexa, cuprea, subtus nigro-picea, nitida; pedibus purpureo-eneis; labro, tarsis, antennisque fulvis, his obscuris, articulis septimo apice penultimo ultimoque totis fuscis; thorace lateribus rotundatis, obsolete bidentatis, dorso profunde foveolato-punctato ; elytris sub- remote fortiter punctatis, infra basin transversim depressis, modice elevato-costatis, costis antice interruptis ; femoribus quatuor posticis subtus unispinosis, Long. 2 lin. Hab. Amazons. Head punctured, face obliquely strigose on either side, im- pressed in the middle with a broad, longitudinal furrow. Thorax deeply impressed with numerous punctiform fovee, which are rather less crowded in the middle of the disc; on the centre of the Jatter are also four or five slightly raised impunctate spaces. LElytra subacutely rounded at their apex, very convex, their hinder portion obliquely deflexed; surface subremotely punctate, the punctures arranged in irregular striae; on each New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 341 elytron are about eight broad but moderately raised costz, which, entire towards their apex, are more or less interrupted on the anterior portion of the elytron. 4, Chalcophyma tuberculosa. Subrotundata, valde convexa, obscure znea aut cuprea, sub- nitida, subtus piceo-enea; pedibus pallide rufo-piceis ; antennis fulvo-fuscis, basi fulvis; thorace lateribus medio angulatis et unidentatis, dorso rude rugoso, elevato- reticulato, disco obsoletius gibboso, medio longitudinaliter suleato ; elytris rugosis, tuberculis conicis numerosis hic illic (praesertim ad basin et ad apicem) coeuntibus et cretas longitudinales breves formantibus ; femoribus quatuor poste- rioribus subtus unidentatis. Long. 13—2 lin. Hab. Amazons. Head distinctly punctured, face obliquely strigose on either side, impressed in the middle with a broad longitudinal furrow ; antenne fusco-fulvous, the fifth, sixth and seventh joints being stained with fusco-eneous ; two basal joints, together with the labrum and palpi, bright fulvous; jaws nigro-piceous, epistome piceo-zeneous. Elytra closely covered with small strongly raised conical tubercles, which here and there coalesce and form short longitudinal ridges: of these latter four at the base of each elytron and two on the middle disc are more strongly raised than the rest. Genus Enpocernatus, Chevr., Dej. Cat. 1. Endocephalus spilotus. Anguste-oblongus, subparallelus, fulvus, nitidus ; oculis, mandi- bulis, capitis macula, thoracis maculis quatuor subquadratim dispositis, scutello elytrorumque maculis decem (his in serie- bus transversis tribus, 2—4—4, prima infra, secunda vix ante tertiaque pone medium dispositis) nigris; elytris sat fortiter subcrebre punctatis. Long. 33 —44 lin. Hab. Amazons. Genus Cotaspris, Fabr. 1. Colaspis elegantula. Oblongo-elongata, rufo-fulva, nitida; antennis (basi praetermiss4) oculisque nigris ; thorace transverso, lateribus medio angulatis; elytris rugoso-, prope suturam substriatim-puncetatis, infra 34 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of basin transversim depressis, leete metallico-viridibus, utrisque maculé magna orbiculata basali, vittaque lata vix ante medium fere ad apicem extensa cupreis. Long. 23 lin. Hab. Amazons. Fam,.GA.Lb.E R.U C LD A; Sub-fam. HALTICIN A. Genus SorpHRENA. Corpus anguste ovale, convexum. Caput modice exsertum, perpendiculare ; antennis brevibus, robustis, subincrassatis, articulo Imo incrassato, 2do brevi, modice incrassato, 3tio paullo elongato, 4to brevi, obtrigono, 5to ad 10um singulis adhuc brevioribus, transversis, paullo ampliatis, leviter com- pressis, 1lmo articulum basalem longitudine fere zequante, subovato ; facie late carinata; oculis subrotundatis, pro- minulis. Thorax transversus, lateribus rotundatis, an- guste marginatis. Scutellum trigonum. Elytra_ thorace paullo latiora, ovata, anguste marginata, limbo inflexo fere horizontali; supra confuse punctata. Pedes modice robusti ; coxis anticis vix elevatis, transversis; femoribus posticis in- crassatis, subtus canaliculatis; ¢2bis posticis dorso tricarinatis, apice spina brevi acuta armatis; tarsis posticis tibiarum apicibus insertis. Type Sophrena ornata. 1, Sophrena ornata. Ovalis, modice convexa, flava, nitida; antennis extrorsum ocu- lisque nigris; elytris postice rufo-fulvis; thoracis maculis arcuatis duabus disco transversim positis, elytrorum linea suturali antice, limbo laterali utrimque abbreviato, fascia sinuaté prope medium posita, maculisque nonnullis disci anterioris, nigro-piceis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Amazons. Genus CrepipopERa, Foud., Allard. 1. Crepidodera elegantula. Elongata, subparallela, cupreo-zenea, nitida ; pedibus antennisque flavis, his extrorsum fuscis; capite levi, vertice utrinque foveis rotundatis (circa 5) leviter impressis; thorace vix transverso, antice conyexo, levi, punctis minutis sparse im- New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 343 presso ; elytris setulis suberectis sparse vestitis, fortiter punc- tato-striatis, interstitiis planis, ad latera convexiusculis, Long. 1 lin. Hab. Brazil. Head triangular; lower portion of face clothed with long silky hairs, facial ridge narrow, encarpe subtriangular, mouth obscure fulvous; antennz rather longer than the head and thorax, stout, distinetly thickened towards their apex, five or six basal joints fulvous, the rest fuscous. Thorax rather broader than long, its anterior margin sparingly clothed with silky hairs; sides nearly straight and parallel, converging at their apex, broadly margined, the anterior angles slightly thickened, obtuse. Elytra much broader than the thorax, nearly four times its length, sides sub- parallel; interspaces between the striz impressed with a row of distantly-placed minute punctures. 2. Crepidodera Brasiliensis. Subelongata, ovata, fulva, nitida; antennis extrorsum oculisque nigris; capite thoraceque lzvibus, impunctatis; elytris tenuissime sed regulariter punctato-striatis, striis ad latera obsolete sulcatis; tarsis infuscatis. Long. 1 lin. Hab. Brazil. Very similar in form to C. impressa: the antenne, their three basal joints excepted, black ; elytra much more finely and regu- larly punctured, each stria being formed of a single row of regu- larly-placed punctures; sides of thorax rounded, converging at apex, anterior angles very slightly thickened. Genus Aputuona, Foud., Allard. 1. Aphthona meerens. Breviter ovato-rotundata, convexa, nitida, supra nigra; antennis obscure fulvis, extrorsum infuscatis; subtus picea, pedibus fusco-fulvis ; thorace tenuissime subcrebre punctato ; elytris subremote tenuissime punctatis. Long. 14 lin. Hab. Brazil. Sub-fam. GALLERUCINE. Genus Catomera, Erichs. 1. Caclomera ruficornis. Subelongata, nigra, nitida; capite thoraceque coccineis; antennis scutelloque rufo-fulvis ; elytris postice vix ampliatis, creber- rime punctatis, opacis, nigro-sericels. 344 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of Long. 43 lin. Hab. Brazil (Spirito Sancto). Head sparingly clothed with long fulvous hairs, jaws black, labrum fulvous; front and vertex impressed with a longitudinal groove. Thorax transverse, sides obtusely angled about their middle, emarginate posteriorly ; upper surface deeply transversely sulcate, smooth and shining, impunctate and glabrous on the disc, irregularly excavated, subrugose and sparingly pubescent on the lateral margin. Elytra oblong, scarcely dilated posteriorly. Under surface clothed with somewhat coarse adpressed pubescence. Abdomen punctured, apical segment emarginate, impressed before the apex with a distinct fovea. 2. Coelomera leta. Elongata, subparallela, rufo-testacea, nitida, fulvo-sericea ; femorum apice, tibiis, tarsis, antennisque nigris ; elytris nigro- ceruleis, subnitidis, crebre punctatis, minute granulosis. Long. 52 lin. Hab. Rio Grande. Front excavated, impressed together with the vertex with a longitudinal groove. Thorax transverse, sides rounded, narrowed behind the middle; upper surface broadly excavated transversely, remotely punctured, disc glabrous, sides sparingly pubescent. Elytra narrowly oblong, scarcely dilated posteriorly, moderately convex, slightly flattened along the suture, clothed at the base and sides with fulvo-sericeous hairs. Apical segment of abdomen emarginate. I only know a single specimen of this species ; it is probable that when in a fresh state the whole surface of the elytra is covered with sericeous pubescence. 3. Cceelomera bipustulata. Subelongata, pallide fulva, nitida, pube concolori vestita, supra subopaca, fusco-sericea; vertice, thoracis disco, elytrisque viridi-nigris ; antennis nigro-piceis, mandibulis nigris, tibiis apice tarsisque fuscis ; thorace transverso, lateribus angulatis ; elytris subparallelis, modice convexis, subfortiter crebre punc- tatis, singulatim limbo exteriori pustulaque magna disci medio posita obscure fulvis, Long. 43 lin. Hab. Ega, Upper Amazons. Front and vertex impressed with a longitudinal groove. Thorax transverse, transversely concave, closely punctured; the dark patch on the disc is transversely-quadrate and covers nearly the whole of the surface. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 345 Genus Diasrortica, Erichs. 1. Diabrotica coccinea. Elongata, convexa, nitida, subtus flava; abdominis apice pleu- risque nigris; tarsorum articulis duobus ultimis fuscis; supra leete coccinea; antennis flavis, harum articulis tribus ultimis, oculis labroque nigris, epistomate piceo; thorace sub- quadrato, lateribus subrectis, leviter sinuatis, apice con- vergentibus, dorso levi, vix pone medium bi-foveolato ; elytris subparallelis, postice vix ampliatis, singulatim apice sinuatis, angulo suturali acuto; dorso subcrebre tenuiter punctatis, profunde excavatis et sulcatis, basi et inter sulcos ventricosis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. New Granada. Front impressed with a short longitudinal groove, which runs upwards and terminates on a level with the upper margin of the eyes in a deep fovea. FElytra impressed on the outer dise below the humeral callus with three or four large shallow foveze ; in addition on the inner dise are three broad transverse grooves ; the first of these, semicircular, bounds the basilar space beneath ; the second slightly curved, but the reverse way of the former, runs across the inner disc about its middle, and the third, oblique, is placed a short distance below the second ; the basilar space on each elytron and the surfaces between the transverse sulci are slightly raised and thickened. 2. Diabrotica pulchra. Elongata, subparallela, nigra, nitida; abdomine pedibusque flavo- fulvis, illo basi tarsisque seepe infuscatis; tarsorum articulis duobus ultimis nigris; antennarum articulis basalibus tribus obscure fulvis, penultimis tribus albis; thorace transverso, disco transversim, excavato, rugoso-punctato, fulvo, piceo- infuscato ; elytris subelongatis, dorso subdeplanatis, rugosis, elevato-vittatis, viridi-aneis, limbo Jaterali, apice, fascidque transversa vix pone medium posita, fulvis. Mas.—FElytris apicem versus prope suturam creta brevi elevata instructis. Long. 4—43 lin. Hab. New Granada (Magdalena River). VOL, Il, THIRD SERIES, PART IV.—MARCH, 1865, Gc 346 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of Head smooth, impunctate, forehead impressed with an oblong fovea. Thorax transverse, sides nearly straight, slightly sinuate behind their middle, obliquely deflexed, slightly diverging from behind forwards; disc depressed, broadly transversely excavated, rugose-punctate. Elytra subelongate, subparallel, slightly dilated from the base towards the apex, the latter rounded; surface rugose-punctate, disc of each elytron with five or six elevated vittee, which commencing below the base are gradually lost towards the apex of the elytron, their surface equally rugose with the rest of the disc; the curved ridge in the ¢ smooth and nitidous, the fulvous colour of the apex extending upwards and covering its hinder two-thirds. 3. Diabrotica puncticollis. Elongata, nitida, subtus nigra, supra nigro-eenea ; pedibus pallide flavo-fulvis ; tarsis antennisque pallide fuscis, his basi fulvis, articuloseptimo abdomineque albis; thorace fortiter crebre punctato, dorso utrinque foveolato; elytris subelongatis, modice convexis, dorso subdeplanatis, crebre subrugoso-punc- tatis, elevato-vittatis, subopacis, margine laterali apice dilatato, fulvo. Mas.—Elytris ante apicem prope suturam callo valido antice excavato armatis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Columbia. Lower portion of face coarsely punctured; front obliquely strigose on either side, impressed in the middle with a longitudinal groove. ‘Thorax transverse, sides nearly straight, slightly di- verging in front, sinuate behind their middle, all the angles pro- minent; disc closely and coarsely punctured, slightly flattened in the middle, impressed on either side with a deep fovea, the medial space between the two excavations being also depressed. Elytra subelongate, subparallel, slightly dilated towards the apex, mode- rately convex, flattened along the suture; each elytron with six or seven smooth elevated vittee, the interspaces closely punctured, subrugose. The elytra in the ¢ are armed with a large smooth semi-lunate protuberance, placed transversely close to the suture, the concavity looking forwards. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 347 « 4, Diabrotica sublimbata. Elongata, viridi-fusca, nitida; abdominis segmentorum mar- ginibus femoribusque pallidis; antennis nigris, articulis duobus ultimis (ultimi apice excepto) albis ; thorace elytrisque pra- sinis, illo dorso bi-impresso, fusco-signato, his intra mar- ginem unicostatis, crebre punctatis, sutura linedque submar- ginali nigro-fuscis. Long. 23 lin. Hab. Amazons. Thorax subquadrate, sides nearly parallel, slightly sinuate, con- verging towards their apex; upper surface flattened, impressed in the middle with two large foveee; three small patches placed in a triangle on the disc, together with a submarginal vitta on either side, fuscous. Elytra subelongate, slightly increasing in width from the base towards their apex, moderately convex, closely punctured; on each elytron, just within the lateral border, is a broad costa, which, commencing at the humeral callus, termi- nates a short distance below the middle of the elytron; surface immediately within the costa sulcate. Body beneath clothed with coarse adpressed griseous hairs. 5. Diabrotica Deyrollei. Elongata, nigra, nitida; antennarum articulis duobus ultimis basi albis; epistomate, femoribus (his nigro-lineatis) thoraceque pallide flavis; hoc levi, dorso obsolete bi-impresso, vitt& nigra tenuissima basi dilatata instructo; elytris oblongis, subparallelis, medice convexis, subopacis, minute granulosis, sat fortiter subcrebre punctatis, obscure viridi-eneis, utrisque fascia Jat&é prope medium, utrinque abbreviata, antice et postice emarginatA, maculisque rotundatis duabus, altera infra basin alteraque subapicali, flavo-albis. Long. 4 lin. Hab. New Granada (Magdalena River). Front triangularly impressed above the eyes. Thorax transverse, sides nearly straight and parallel, converging at their apex, anterior . angles produced into an obtuse tooth; dise smooth, faintly ex- cavated on either side. Elytra narrowly oblong, subparallel, apex regularly rounded; surface finely granulose, somewhat coarsely punctured. I have named this species after M. H. Deyrolle of Paris. cc2 3148 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of 6. Diabrotica tenella. (0 Elongata, viridis, nitida; pectore,‘abdomine, pedibus antennisque flavis, his articulis quatuor ultimis nigro-fuscis; thorace sub- quadrato, levi, dorso bifoveolato ; elytris paullo ampliatis, apice subtruncatis, prope suturam leviter obsolete sinuatis, prasinis, subnitidis, crebre punctatis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Mexico. Front impressed with a large fovea; mouth fulvous. Thorax subquadrate, sides nearly straight and parallel, slightly converging at their apex, anterior angles tuberculate ; disc moderately convex, flattened at the base, smooth, impunctate, impressed on either side behind the middle with a large fovea. 7. Diabrotica suturalis. Elongata, nigra, nitida; antennis sordide albis, basi infuscatis ; thorace transversim excavato, piceo, apice, superficiei infe- rioris lateribus, femoribusque pallide fulvis, his dorso versus apicem, tibiis tarsisque fuscis; elytris subelongatis, paullo ampliatis, modice convexis, dorso subdepressis, tenuiter subcrebre punctatis, sordide fulvis, vitté lata suturali a basi fere ad apicem extensa, medio constricta, nigra. Mas.—Elytris apicem versus prope suturam creta elevata brevi instructis. Long. 4 lin, Hab. Cayenne. Front impressed with a longitudinal groove, which runs upwards to the vertex, its middle impressed with a distinct fovea. Thorax transverse, sides nearly straight and parallel, sinuate behind the middle, converging in front, obliquely deflexed ; upper surface nitidous, remotely punctured, broadly excavated transversely, either side of the excavated portion being more deeply excavated than the centre, and forming two distinct foveze on its surface. 8. Diabrotica Hebe. Subelongata, nigra, nitida; vertice thoraceque trifoveolato rufo-piceis; femoribus antennisque flavis, harum articulis quinque basalibus dorso piceis, articulo ultimo apice nigro ; elytris ampliatis, subventricosis, singulatim apice obsolete sinuatis, sat fortiter suberebre punctatis, castaneis, margine New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 349 laterali, parte tertia postica fascidque lata vix pone medium posita, marginem non attingente, sordide flavis. Long. 4 lin. Hab. Columbia (Bogota). Front impressed with a large deep fovea. Thorax transverse, sides nearly straight, slightly converging from base to apex, an- terior angles thickened ; disc subremotely punctured, impressed on either side with a deep oblique fovea, a third smaller and rotundate being placed in the centre of the base, just in front of the scu- tellum. 9. Diabrotica discoidalis. Subelongata, pallide flava, nitida; capite, scutello, pectore, femorum linea dorsali, tibiis tarsisque nigris; antennarum articulis tribus ultimis (ultimi apice excepto) albis; thorace vix transverso, dorso levi, non foveolato; elytris a basi apicem versus ampliatis, convexis, tenuiter punctatis, disco nigris, fascia latissima mediali, antice posticeque profunde sinuata, limbum non attingente, flava. Long. 42 lin. Hab. Banks of Napo, Ecuador. Front impressed with a deep fovea. Thorax scarcely broader than long, sides nearly straight, slightly converging from base to apex, more quickly narrowed at the apex itself, posterior angles produced into an obtuse tooth; disc smooth, remotely and obso- letely punctured ; in the middle of the basal margin is an indistinct depression. Elytra finely punctured, subovate, somewhat en- larged posteriorly, lateral margin broadly dilated. 10. Diabrotica 4-vittata. Elongata, subtus nigra; thorace, metasterno plaga utrinque, abdominisque segmentorum marginibus sordide albis; supra sordide alba, ore, vertice, antennis totis, thoracis plagis duabus scutelloque nigris; thorace transverso, dorso levi, bifoveolato ; elytris sat ventricosis, fortiter crebre punctatis, subopacis, utrisque vitta submarginali, altera intra suturam, maculaque subapicali nigris. Long. 43 lin. Hab. Brazil. Front impressed with a deep fovea. Thorax transverse, sides nearly straight, slightly diverging from base towards the apex, sinuate behind the middle; disc smooth, impunctate, deeply im- 350 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of pressed on either side, the space between the fove being also depressed ; the two black patches, triangular in shape, are placed one on each of the fovez, the surfaces of which they more than cover. Elytra moderately inflated, gradually increasing in width from their base towards the apex, the latter regularly rounded ; the two longitudinal vittee, which are moderately broad, commence at the base and terminate each a short distance from the sutural angle, the spot which ought to form their point of junction being occupied by a small square patch; in some individuals the sub- marginal vitta is continued onwards and is united with the patch itself. 11. Diabrotica dimidiatipennis. Subelongata, nigra, subnitida; elytris a basi apicem versus am- pliatis, dense punctatis ; capite (ore, antennis oculisque pre- termissis), thorace bifoveolato, elytrorumque dimidio antico flavo-fulvis. Long. 4 lin. Hab. Peru. Front impressed with a longitudinal groove, which, dilated at its middle, extends upwards to the vertex ; antenne entirely black. Thorax transverse, disc smooth, impressed on either side, just behind the middle, with a large oblique fovea. Scutellumtriangular. Elytra closely and somewhat coarsely punctured. 12. Diabrotica Saundersi. Subelongata, nigra, subopaca; capite, thorace bifoveolato, elytris- que fulvis, subnitidis, his ampliatis, dimidio postico nigro, opaco, granuloso, impunctato ; antennarum articulis dorso piceo-maculatis, tribus ultimis nigro-piceis. Long. 44 lin, Hab. Quito. Front impressed with a deep groove, which terminates just above the upper margin of the eyes in a deep fovea; antenne fulvous, their joints more or less stained above and at the apex with piceous, three terminal joints pitchy-black. ‘Thorax broader than in D. dimidiatipennis, impressed on either side, just behind the middle, with a very oblique fovea. Elytra much broader than the thorax, gradually increasing in width from base towards the apex, very convex; fulvous portion of their surface, which extends from the base to immediately before their middle, subnitidous, less closely and deeply punctured than in D. dimidiatipennis ; black portion very opaque, impunctate, minutely granulose. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 351 13. Diabrotica subsulcata. Subelongata, obscure viridi-nigra, nitida ; abdomine, femoribus antennisque flavo-fulvis, his articulo ultimo fusco; tibiis tar- sisque pallide flavo-viridibus; thorace subquadrato, dorso leevi, non foveolato, lateribus et infra late viridi; elytris a basi apicem versus ampliatis, subcrebre punctatis, disco ante medium obsolete bisulcatis, margine laterali apiceque lete viridibus, margine apicali rufo- piceo. Long, 3% lin. Hab. New Granada (Magdalena River). Thorax rather longer than broad, sides nearly straight and parallel, dise not impressed with the usual foveee. Middle disc of each elytron with two ill-defined slightly-curved longitudinal grooves, which, commencing at the base, terminate below the middle of the elytron; interspace slightly thickened. 14. Diabrotica tetraspilota. Subelongata, robusta, pallide rufo-fulva, nitida; genubus, tibiis, tarsis antennisque flavis, harum articulis quatuor ultimis elytrorumque maculis magnis quatuor nigris; unguibus piceis; thorace transverso, dorso levi, non impresso; elytris sub- ovatis, valde convexis, infra basin transversim sulcatis, sub- remote tenuiter punctatis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Mexico. Front impressed with a large fovea. Sides of thorax straight and parallel, converging at their apex ; disc shining, impunctate. Elytra subovate, slightly dilated posteriorly, somewhat broadly margined: on the disc of each are placed two large black patches ; one just below the base, subtrigonate, with all its angles rounded ; the second immediately below the middle, subrotundate. Fam. HISPID &. Genus Urortara,.Chevr. M.S. 1. Uroplata 12-maculata. Subcuneiformis, subdepressa, fulva; antennis thoracisque lateribus nigris ; elytris obscure metallico-purpureis, utrisque maculis sex fulvis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Santarem. Collected by Mr. Bates. Narrowly wedge-shaped, subdepressed, bright fulvous ; antenne 352 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of moderately robust, subfusiform, slightly compressed, two basal joints short, nearly equal; the first strongly, the second mode- rately dilated; third nearly equal in length to the two pre- ceding; fourth, fifth, and sixth short, equal; seventh slightly longer; eighth and three terminal joints closely united, their articulations distinct. Head smooth, impunctate; eyes pitchy black. Thorax at the base more than half as broad again as long; sides rounded, narrowed and sinuate in front; above subcylindrical, transversely excavated near the base; middle of disc with a shallow longitudinal groove; surface coarsely punctured, the punctures crowded at the sides. Scutellum smooth, its apex obscure purple. Elytra broader than the thorax, slightly increasing in width towards the posterior angles, the latter produced into a flattened spine, its apex bidentate ; sides narrowly margined, their outer border coarsely serrate, serrations more distant when approaching the posterior angles ; apex obtusely rounded, its margin slightly dilated, serrate ; above subdepressed, each elytron with four elevated coste, the two outer ones less raised, the second from the outer margin being interrupted for nearly the whole of its length ; suture also raised, interstices each with a double row of deep punctures ; dark metallic purple, each elytron with six bright fulvous spots ; one at the base, the second oblique placed on the inner disc before its middle; two others beyond the middle, placed obliquely, the outer one attached to the lateral margin; the fifth transverse, subapical, confluent at the suture with its fellow on the opposite elytron, and the sixth narrow and transverse, placed on the apical margin, also confluent at the suture. Beneath shining fulvous; anterior pair of thighs simple. 2. Uroplata Walkeri. Elongata, postice vix ampliata, subdepressa, fulva; thoracis vittA laterali maculisque indistinctis duabus elytrisque viridi-me- tallicis ;, his serratis, apice truncatis, angulo postico acuto, vix producto, utrisque tricostatis, maculis quinque fulvis in- structis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Brazil. Head strongly produced between the eyes, vertex smooth, im- pressed in the middle with a deep fovea; antennz longer than the head and thorax, robust, indistinctly thickened towards their apex; two basal joints equal, subovate, very slightly thickened ; third equal in length to the two preceding; fourth about half the New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 353 length of the third; the fifth still shorter; sixth transverse, two- thirds the length of the fifth; seventh not quite equal in length to the fifth, and, together with the four terminal joints, indistinctly thickened and slightly compressed, the apical joint acute ; sutural lines between these last four joints entirely obsolete. Thorax at the base rather more than one half as broad again as long, sides nearly straight behind, narrowed and slightly rounded in front ; basal margin deeply sinuate on either side, its middle portion pro- duced into a short broadly truncate lobe, the surface of which is oblique and deeply impressed with a transverse groove ; above subcylindrical, somewhat flattened in the middle, hinder portion of disc transversely excavated ; surface closely covered with large round deep punctures. Scutellum transverse, subpentagonal. Elytra broader than the thorax, subparallel in front, scarcely dilated towards the hinderangles; lateral border narrow, indistinctly toothed ; produced at the hinder angle into a flattened nearly rec- tangular plate, the apex of which is armed with one or two strong teeth ; interspaces between the costa deeply gemellate-punctate ; third interspace dilated for a short space, commencing just below its middle; the puncturing in that portion of the surface being less regularly placed; each elytron with five large fulvous patches placed as follows—one on the humeral margin; a second on the inner disc, just below the basilar space, common and forming with its fellow on the opposite elytron a large subcordate patch, from the upper and outer angle of which a narrow ramus passes upwards along the second costa to the base of the elytron, where it is dilated and forms a small spot; the third quadrate, placed on the outer disc, about its middle, attached to the lateral border, and extend- ing across the elytron as far as the first costa; the fourth, com- mencing at a point parallel with the lower edge of the third, is placed on the inner disc, common like the second, and extends downwards nearly to the apex of the elytron, its hinder half being outwardly dilated, and forming a transverse subapical fascia, abbreviated on the outer disc by the extreme edge of its dilated portion; it is confluent with the fifth patch, which is placed on the outer margin halfway between the middle and apex. 3. Uroplata Stevensi. Elongata, subcuneiformis, subdepressa, fulva; antennis nigris ; thoracis lateribus vittaque elytrisque viridi-zeneis; his quad- ricostatis, angulo postico in spinam compressam acutam lateraliter productis, apice obtuse truncatis, utrisque quad- 354 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of ricostatis, et maculis quinque fulvis instructis; corpore subtus obscure fulvo ; pedibus flavis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. San Paulo, Upper Amazons. Elongate, subcuneiform, subdepressed. Antenne moderately robust, subfusiform ; their basal joints nearly equal in length, the first two thickened, the third slender; fourth and fifth each rather shorter, equal; sixth about equal to the third, seventh distinctly elongate; eighth and three following closely united, their articu- lations obsolete. Head smooth, front indistinctly impressed between the eyes, vertex with a dark metallic green patch. Thorax nearly one third broader at the base than long; conic, sides slightly sinuate, the anterior angles produced into a small obtuse tooth; above convex, transversely excavated near the hase, basal lobe transversely grooved ; surface rugose-punctate ; fulvous, a narrow line on the extreme lateral margin, together with a broad vitta down the middle, metallic green. Scutellum sub- quadrate, its apex rounded, surface smooth, impunctate. Elytra broader than the thorax, humeral angles rounded ; sides nearly parallel, scarcely diverging posteriorly, narrowly margined, their outer edge serrate, posterior angles produced laterally into a large flattened acute spine; apex obtusely truncate, its outer edge toothed ; above subconvex, flattened along the suture, shoulders slightly prominent ; each elytron with four elevated cost, the suture also costate, interspaces each with a double row of deep regular punctures, first interspace from the suture with a third row at its base; metallic green, each elytron with five bright fulvous patches; the first elongate, extending from the base to beyond the middle, its base and apex curving inwards; the second small, placed just below the scutellum, common, confluent at its outer edge with the first; the third narrow, on the outer border just above the posterior angle ; the fourth subapical, common and forming a broad transverse patch ; and the last narrow, placed on the apical border, rufous. Beneath obscure fulvous ; legs yellow; thighs simple. 4, Uroplata Gray. Late oblonga, subcuneiformis, depressa, subtus nitida, rufo- picea ; pleuris prothoraceque nigris; pedibus fulvis, tarsis infus- catis; supra subnitida; capite nigro, thorace scutelloque fulvis, illo vittulis quinque nigris ; elytris apice obtusis, serratis, an- gulo postico lamina compressa trigona obtusa, postice serrata, dorso concava, lateraliter valde producta, instructis; utrisque New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 355 quadricostatis, costis duabus exterioribus apice confluentibus, tertia medio fere interrupta ; obscure nigro-purpureis, maculis parvis numerosis disci, maculaque transversé communi ante apicem, fulvis ; femoribus anticis subtus spina brevi armatis. Long. 2 lin. Hab. Brazil. Head moderately produced between the eyes, vertex lon- gitudinally grooved ; antennz longer than the head and thorax, robust, subincrassate, two basal joints short, equal, the basal one slightly thickened, third rather longer than the second, fourth scarcely equal to the third, fifth and sixth very short, transverse, nearly equal, the sixth however being visibly shorter than the fifth, seventh nearly as long as the two preceding. taken conjointly, thickened, and forming with the four terminal joints an elongated slightly-compressed club ; the sutural lines between the last four joints obsolete. Thorax twice as broad as long, sides obliquely narrowed from just above the extreme base to the apex ; upper surface subcylindrical in front, flattened and transversely excavated on the hinder disc, deeply impressed with large deep round pune- tures, which, closely crowded on the sides, are irregularly placed at much more distant intervals on the disc ; whole surface of basal lobe excavated, depressed. Scutellum transverse, its apex obtuse. Elytra scarcely broader at their base than the thorax ; humeral callus laterally prominent, its apex not extending beyond the lateral border, obtuse; sides gradually dilated from below their base to the hinder angles, narrowly margined, their outer edge distantly and irregularly serrate; hinder angles produced slightly outwards and obliquely upwards and scarcely backwards inte a triangular plate, the upper surface of which is deeply concave, its apex obtuse, and its apical border armed with four or five coarse teeth; upper sur- face flattened, interspaces deeply gemellate-punctate, the first irre- gularly punctured at the base, a space on the outer disc just below the middle, extending between the second and fourth costz, irre- gularly punctured. 5. Uroplata terminalis. Elongata, apicem versus vix ampliata, subdepressa, obscure fulva, subnitida; pedibus flavis; vertice macula utrinque, antennis, thorace utrinque vitta lata laterali, abdominisque segmento ultimo, nigris; elytris apice obtusis, distincte subfortiter serratis, angulo postico parum prominulo, ro- tundato, utrisque tricostatis, linea suturali postice abbre- 350 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of viata, margine apicali, vittaque lata laterali, postice abbre- viata, introrsum late emarginata, obscure metallico-viridibus. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Amazons. Head moderately produced between the eyes, vertex keeled in front, furnished posteriorly with an oblong fovea, orbital margin black; antennze nearly half the length of the body, moderately robust, subincrassate, two basal joints nearly equal, the first thickened, the second ovate, third half as long again as the second, fourth nearly one half shorter than the third, fifth and sixth each gradually decreasing in length, four last joints nearly cylindrical, seventh one-fourth shorter than the third, slightly thickened, and together with the four following joints forming a somewhat compressed indistinct club ; sutural articula- tions between the last four obsolete. ‘Thorax nearly twice as broad as long at the base, narrowed from base to apex, sides dis- tinctly bisinuate, apical angle armed with a short, curved, obtuse tooth ; above subcylindrical, flattened and transversely excavated on the hinder disc; this latter portion smooth, nearly impunctate, remainder of the surface closely covered with large deeply-im- pressed punctures; basilar lobe broadly truncate, its surface oblique, transversely grooved. Scutellum transverse at the base, sides narrowed towards the apex, the latter obtusely truncate. Elytra broader than the thorax, narrow, subparallel in front, very slightly dilated towards the hinder angle, the latter scarcely produced; lateral border very narrow, very remotely armed with small teeth ; apical border moderately dilated, its edge obtusely rounded, coarsely serrate; each elytron with three raised costa, their interspaces deeply gemellate-punctate; interspace between the second and third cost irregularly punctured for a short space below its middle. Black apical segment of abdomen marked on either side with a small fulvous spot. 6. Uroplata 16-guttata. Elongata, dorso subdepressa, picea, subnitida ;_pedibus, antennis extrorsum, thoracis vitté elytrorumque guttis 16 pallide fulvis ; elytris utrisque tricostatis, parallelis, apice rotundatis, angulo postico obsoleto. Long. 13 lin. Hab. Brazil. Head not produced between the eyes, vertex longitudinally grooved ; antennz short, robust, cylindrical, incrassate, gradually New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 357 increasing in thickness from their base upwards ; basal joints very short, transverse, second and third nearly equal, each about one half as long again as the first; three following joints gradually de- creasing in length from the third, transverse; seventh nearly equal to the two preceding united, and conjointly with the four apical joints forming a narrowly-ovate club, the sutural lines between the four latter joints obsolete, the six basal joints pitchy-black. Thorax rather broader than long, sides nearly straight behind, rounded and narrowed in front; anterior angles armed with a subacute tooth ; subcylindrical above, transversely excavated on the hinder disc ; surface deeply and closely impressed with large punctures, rugose on the sides; basal lobe depressed. Scutellum smooth, tri- angular, its apex broadly truncate. Elytra parallel, broader than the thorax, apex regularly rounded, margin narrowly dilated, serrate, sides indistinctly sinuate along their middle; each elytron with three strongly-raised coste, their interspaces deeply gemellate- punctate. ‘" Se ee, iy us Mi; ‘ihe Labware 7 e zi “Wess As EES i bl schat aay j cd 7 PRIZE ESSAYS. As an inducement to the study of Economic Entomology, and with a view to increase the practical utility of the Entomological Society, the Council offers Two Prizes of the value of Five Guineas each to be awarded to the authors of Essays or Memoirs, of sufficient merit and drawn up from personal obser- vation, on the anatomy, economy, or habits of any insect or group of insects which is in any way especially serviceable or obnoxious to mankind. The Essays should be illustrated by figures of the insects in their different states, and (if the species be noxious) must show the results of actual experiments made for the pre- vention of their attacks or the destruction of the insects them- selves. On former occasions the Council has selected a definite subject, as e. g., the Coccus of the Pine Apple, the larva of Agrotis Segetum (the large caterpillar of the turnip), &c. The consequence was, that competition was diminished or not called into play. On the present occasion, therefore, the selection is left to the candidates themselves, provided only that the subject be one fairly belonging to the Economic branch of Entomology. The Essays must be sent to the Secretary at No. 12, Bedford Row, with fictitious signatures or mottoes, on or before the 31st December, 1865, when they will be referred to a Committee to decide upon their merits ; each must be accompanied by a sealed letter indorsed with the fictitious signature or motto adopted by its author, and inclosing the name and address of the writer, The Prize Essays shall be the property of, and will be pub- lished by, the Society. el aie, | a ry , £ r ; is 3, A He Pug Bs : ag hid p> ail 2 oh faa rr Es A a a ae eialieu ie Nei ok AL nite miss afte dike api a as ai Hang e nts aunt ail A ~ eae ons eon hie aL a if Se ON AU" 1g sl a ahs i Ba ; . 4 yc sis fiah wit Laie athe pe toad anki f. af fog Rogtte pi Suh utd’ ihe Kan id est | Re tnt i sé el (ist es! an ak Hid Asti iF 1 ee, . ’ yeu BENT Ab. cd pak ile oe : i ag a ae a tee 2 * ik Oe ree Bids e if A), Vat y ne i in ninety Bi ae pie ‘ wi nen iF Lg Aid ‘hay + qi fd 4 at poe ie FAN : ae 1 + : AT uIoul, i a ts eet ( 359 ) XVI. On the Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. By H. W. Barss, F.Z.S. [Read 3rd April, 1865. ] Tue genus Agra is too well known to Coleopterists to render necessary a detailed description in this place. It is composed of a series of elongated forms of metallic colouring, belonging to the Truncatipennes division of the great tribe Carabici; and in Lacordaire’s system constitutes, with Calleida, Cymindis and many allied genera, the first Group of the Lebiides: Dromius forming the type of the second Group, and Lebia of the third Group of the same Family (or as he terms it Zribu, in accordance with the French nomenclature of assemblages of genera). As a genus Agra is distinguished from its nearest relative Calleida by the head being constricted behind and forming a distinct neck, and by the mentum having a strong tooth in the middle of its emar- gination. Both genera have the terminal joint of the labial palpi hatchet-shaped, and also strongly-bilobed penultimate joints to the tarsi, and claws thickened and pectinated. The form of the prothorax, which is not usually admitted in the Carabici as offering generic characters equal in value to those furnished by the oral organs and tarsi, is a leading feature in distinguishing Agra from Calleida and the other allied genera, and is the cha- racter which, combined with the form of the head, gives the dgre their peculiar facies; this part of the body having an elongate conical shape instead of presenting a distinct, more or less plane, pronotum, quadrate or cordate in outline. It is, moreover, always sculptured, the mode of punctuation being common to series of allied species, so as to admit of serving as a character to group them into natural subordinate assemblages. Of the genera familiar to European Entomologists, Cymindis is the nearest related to this favourite tropical group. An American genus recently separated from Cymindis, namely, Apenes of Le- conte, forms a still nearer approximation, as it presents bilobed penultimate tarsal joints. But the Cymindes differ greatly from the Agre, in facies, in the form of the claws, and also in habits, being terrestrial species found under stones and about the roots of herbage, at most climbing the stems of shrubs, whilst the 4gre are wholly arboreal. In this they are like the Calleid@, but the VOL, II. THIRD SERIES, PART V.—SEPT. 1865. DD 360 Mr. H. W. Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 365 Genus Acra. Mentum lobis apice rotundatis, intus haud carinatis. Tibi non compressz, teretes. Zarst supra pilosi, articulis subelongatis, haud compressis, cordatis aut trigonis; unguiculis minus brevibus. A. Mentum lobis longioribus, angustis, apice subacute rotun- datis. 1, Agra erythropus, Dejean. Agra erythropus, Dej. Spéc. Gén. i. 199. + Pr , Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 112. A. robusta, obscure anea; capite ovali, postice modice elon- gato, rotundato-attenuato, oculis valde prominentibus; thorace antice subito attenuato, Jateribus carinatis, episternis valde convexis, supra planis, sparsim punctatis; elytris humeris obliquis, pone medium ampliatis, apice peroblique truncatis, angulis suturalibus acutis, externis dentiformibus, dorso pro- funde punctato-striatis ; antennis pedibusque rufescentibus ; tibiis latis, compressis, angulis externis terminalibus haud prominulis; intermediis apice intus dilatatis. Long. 10 lin. @ $ Segmentis ventralibus punctatis, sparsim hirsutis ; segmento terminali dorsali inciso, ventrali late triangulariter emarginato; pedibus robustis, tarsis latis, articulo ultimo brevi, posticorum primo intus valde rotundato-dilatato. Villa Nova, Lower Amazons. On foliage. Itis on the authority of Baron Chaudoir that I refer the example I possess of this species to 4. erythropus of Dejean, the description of this author presenting no means of identifying the species with certainty. M. de Chaudoir, who possesses the type specimens of Dejean, was acquainted only with females of this and the other species of section A, 2. Agra latipes, Chaudoir. Agra latipes, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 112. A. nigra, nitida, elytris aneo-tinctis ; capite ovali, angustato, — pone oculos elongato, leviter rotundato-attenuato ; thorace antice angustato, levi, medio linea impressa utrinque punc- tato, lateribus carinatis, episternis modice convexis ; elytris postice paulo ampliatis, apice peroblique truncatis, angulis suturalibus acutis, externis dentiformibus, dorso grosse punctato-striatis, punctis partim confluentibus ; tibiis com- pressis. Segmentis ventralibus medio crebre punctatis, dense fusco- 366 Mr. H. W. Bates on the hirsutis ; femoribus (preesertim posticis) validioribus, tarsis latioribus, posticorum articulo basali sequentibus multo ma- jori, intus rotundato-dilatato. ¢ Antennis articulis 8-10 abbreviatis, 8"° brevissimo. Long. 7—9 lin. ’ This species occurred more frequently than the preceding. I met with it, however, only at Ega, about the commencement of the rainy season. B. Mentum lobis latis, breviusculis, apice late rotundatis. a. Elytris foveolatis. a. Capite elongato-ovato. 3. Agra enea, Fabricius. Agra enea, Fab. Syst. Eleuth. 1. p. 224, n. 1. i. oe ee Depspelep. LOS, mel 3 ss > Chaud; Ann-‘Soc. Ent. Fr: 1861, p.21t3. A. elongata, zenea, nitida; capite ovato, postice rotundato- attenuato, glaberrimo; prothorace supra grosse punctato, postice coarctato; elytris lineatim confluenter foveolatis, apice oblique subsinuato-truncatis ; pedibus piceo-cupreis. $ Coxis posticis sementisque ventralibus medio confertim punctatis et pilosis. ¢ Antennis articulo 8° valde abbreviato. 1 captured one individual of this species on a low tree in the forest, at Manaos, on the Rio Negro, It is an inhabitant of Cayenne. 4, Agra metallescens, Chaudoir. Agra metallescens, Chaud. Bull. Mose. 1847, i. p. 95, n. 12. This species, of which the female only is known, is closely allied to A. @nea, but differs conspicuously in its darker bronze colour. M. de Chaudoir possesses two examples from Para. I do not recollect taking the insect myself; and the collections _which I made in the neighbourhood of Para, in the years from 1848 to 1850, were sent to England without my reserving a set of the Coleoptera. 5. Agra Megera, Thomson. Agra Megera, Thomson, Arch, Ent. i. p. 399. as »» » Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 113. A. elongata, robusta, nigra, supra oblivaceo-zenea; capite oblongo, pone oculos subquadrato, basi subito constricto ; thorace capite vix longiori, grosse confluenter punctato, inter- so. ee — Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 367 stitiis glabris, elevatis ; elytris regulariter lineatim foveolatis, apice oblique flexuoso-truncatis, angulis suturalibus pro- ductis; tarsis elongatis, fulvo-hirsutis. $ Mesosterno et segmentis ventralibus (apicali excepto) punc- tatis et longe fulvo-hirsutis ; femoribus crassis, tibiis inter- mediis intus pone medium unco armatis, posticis medio angulatis et intus dente instructis, pone medium intus hir- sutis ; tarsis haud dilatatis. ® Pedibus teretibus, mesosterno abdomineque glabris ; antennis articulo 8° valde abbreviato. Long. 11—13 lin. This is the largest known species of the genus, and is at once distinguishable from its nearest relatives by the quadrate shape of the head in both sexes. I met with it only at Ega, where it occurred sparingly on leaves of trees in the forest. Baron Chaudoir was unacquainted with the true male at the date of his monograph quoted above, and described that sex of an allied species, our 4. anguinea, as the male of 4. Megera. 6. Agra anguinea, vn. sp. (Pl. XX. fig. 6, $.) A. Megere forma et colore simillima, sed minor; capite multo angustiori, haud quadrato, parte postica quam thoracis apice vix latiori, pone oculos leviter attenuato ; thorace medio paulo dilatato. $ Trochanteribus posticis segmentisque ventralibus medio dense, mesosterno medio sparsim, punctatis et pilosis ; tibiis intermediis prope apicem intus dentatis; posticis a medio usque ad apicem intus incrassatis et pilosis; femoribus validioribus. @ Pedibus teretibus ; antennis articulo 8"° valde abbreviato. Long. 103—11 lin. Found also at Ega, in the same situation as 4. Megera. The great differences in secondary sexual features between the males of this form and of 4. Megera forbid their being classed as be- longing to the same species; for it has been generally allowed by attentive students that these characters offer the best guides in distinguishing species, and they may well be so considered, since marked sexual differences afford strong presumption of the non-existence of intercrossing, the surest indication of persistent separation between closely-allied forms. I should not, however, be surprised at intermediate forms of the male sex being found between A, Megera and A. anguinea, or any other similarly-related species. 368 Mr. H. W. Bates on the 7. Agra infuscata, Klug. Azra infuscata, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 15, pl. i. fig. 3. A. angustior, elongata, nigro-zenea, pedibus interdum rufescen- tibus; capite (g) pone oculos conico, (@) rotundato- attenuato; thorace grosse rugoso-punctato ; elytris apice oblique truncato, angulis suturalibus acutis, haud productis nec reflexis, dorso lineatim foveolato. é Femoribus validioribus, tarsorum anticorum articulo basali magno, dilatato; mesosterno, trochanteribus posticis, seg- mentorum ventralium plagis duabus, confertim punctatis et pilosis ; tibiis intermediis prope apicem intus dente parvo armatis, posticis pone medium leviter dilatatis, hirsutis. ¢ Pedibus abdomineque simplicibus ; antennis articulo 8° brevissimo. Long. 93—10 lin. Para, Santarem (banks of Tapajos) and Ega, Upper Amazons. This species differs from A. anguinea in pretty nearly the same degree as the latter does from the giant 4. Megera. It has a wide range; I have specimens before me from localities 1,100 miles apart in a straight line from east to west. 8. Agra reflexidens, Chaudoir. Agra reflexidens, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 114. A. elongata, nigro-zenea, foveolis elytrorum viridi-nitentibus ; capite maris robustiori, feminee angustiori, ovali, pone oculos sensim attenuato; thorace ut in 4. anguinea et A. infuscata, interstitiis paulo latioribus, levissimis ; elytris apice oblique truncatis, angulis suturalibus valde productis, dentiformibus, paulo reflexis. $ Femoribus validioribus ; segmentis ventralibus intermediis medio punctatis et pilosis; tibiis intermediis intus flexuosis, apice subito dilatatis, posticis pone medium vix hirsutis. ® Antennis articulo 8"° valde abbreviato; pedibus abdomineque simplicibus, Long. 93 lin. FEga. In the same situations as the three preceding species, and once taken in copuld. The prolongation of the sutural angle is a good character whereby to distinguish this species, as it exists in both sexes ; it forms a distinet tooth or spine owing to its length and to the truncation being a little sinuated or incurved as it ap- proaches the angle. Species of Ayra of the Amazons Region. 369 9. Agra mustela, n. sp. A. angustata, antice valde attenuata, nigro-zenea, antennis piceo- rufis, articulis apice nigris ; capite angusto, maris pone oculos conico vel in lineis rectis attenuato, femine elliptico vel leviter rotundato-attenuato; thorace gracili, grosse punctato, spatiis magnis levibus, episternis haud convexis, punctis grossis sparsis ; elytris pone basin sinuatis, deinde ampliatis, apice truncatis, angulis suturalibus vix acutis, dorso lineatim foveolatis. $ Metasterno sparsim, trochanteribus segmentisque ventrali- bus plagiatim dense punctatis et longe fulvo-pilosis; tibiis intermediis et posticis intus densissime hirsutis, his medio leviter angulatis, illis prope apicem dente parvo instructis ; femoribus validioribus. @ Antennis articulo 8"° valde abbreviato ; pedibus abdomineque simplicibus. Long. 8 lin. Ega. In the same situations as the preceding. It differs from A. infuscata, to which it is most closely related, by its smaller size and the less oblique truncation of the elytra, which causes the sutural angle to be less acute than in the allied species. The male differs from the corresponding sex of A. infuscata by the almost glabrous metasternum. These points of difference, it must be confessed, are much less important than those which separate the rest of these allied forms, and it is not without hesitation that I have described the present one as distinct. 10, Agra femorata, Klug. Agra femorata, Klug, Entom. Monogr, p. 36, pl. ii. fig. 8. A. elongata, subcylindrica, nigerrima, foveolis elytrorum viridi- punctatis; capite elongato-ovali, pone oculos rotundato- attenuato; thorace subcylindrico, prope apicem subito an- gustato, supra levi, punctis lineatim ordinatis, episternis sparsim punctatis; elytris postice minime ampliatis, apice transversim utrinque bisinuato-truncatis, tridentatis, dorso lineatim foveolatis, foveolis hic illic confluentibus. $ Metasterno leviter, segmentis ventralibus 2—4 utrinque plagis dense punctatis et pilosis; tibiis intermediis et posticis apices versus intus breviter hirsutis, his medio leviter incras- satis, illis prope apicem dentatis; femoribus validioribus. ¢ Antennis articulo 8° abbreviato; elytris dente truncature mediano breviori. Long. 6—8} lin. 370 Mr. H. W. Bates on the Baron Chaudoir has communicated the following note on this species, founded on the specimens brought home by me :— ‘‘ Ta description-de Klug convient trés-bien aux individus que j'ai sous les yeux, et je ne doute point qu’ils ne se rapportent a cette espéce, mais Klug a tort de dire que le ventre est lisse et glabre, car la poitrine du male est pointillée et pubescente sur le milieu et les avant-derniers segments de l’abdomen offrent prés du milieu deux touffes de poils longs (surtout les deux antérieurs), s¢parés par un espace glabre mais finement rugeux. La femelle seule est lisse. Villa Nova et Obydos.” I beat a pair of this species, in copuld, out of a flowering bush at Villa Nova, on the lower Amazons. 11. Agra scrutatriz, n. sp. A. meerenti forma et sculpturd simillima; differt elytris linea recta truncatis, antennis articulo 8’°() brevissimo. Nigro- genea, thorace pedibusque eneo-piceis ; capite elliptico, tho- race gracili, elytris angulis suturalibus leviter productis, externis acute dentiformibus. @ Antennis articulis 8—11 reliquis brevioribus, haud graci- lioribus, 8¥° sequenti dimidio breviori. Long. 7 lin. Ega. Oneexample. M. de Chaudoir gave it as his opinion that this was simply a variety of 4. meerens. The great difference in the truncation of the elytra and the relative length of the eighth antennal joint compel me to consider it a very distinct form. 12. Agra merens, Chaudoir. Agra meerens, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 119. A. femorate simillima, minor, nigra, viridi-zeneo tincta, pedibus piceo-nigris ; capite angustiori, elliptico; elytris in utroque sexu postice ampliatis, foveolis passim discretis, apice utrin- que transversim bisinuato-truncatis, tridentatis, dente sutu- rali haud producto. é Metasterno glabro, segmentis ventralibus 2-3 medio utrinque punctatis et sparsim pilosis ; tibiis posticis medio leviter an- gulatis, pone medium breviter hirsutis. @ Antennis articulis 8-11 gracilibus, 8° sequenti paulo bre- viori. Long. 7—8 lin. Ega. Concealed in leaves of trees in the forest. Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 371 13. Agra callictis, n. sp. A. gracilis, nigra, pedibus pallide flavis, geniculis tibiisque apice nigris, tarsis rufescentibus ; capite elliptico; thorace angusto, dorso levi, lineatim punctato, episternis grosse punctatis ; elytris postice paulo ampliatis, apice flexuoso-truncatis, an- gulis suturalibus haud productis, supra lineatim foveolatis, foveolis partim viridi-tinctis; antennis gracilibus, rufescen- tibus, nigro-maculatis. ¢ Antennis articulis 8-10 preecedentibus minoribus, 8"° sequenti quarta parte breviori. Long. 7 lin. I found this extremely elegant and rare species only at Para. M. de Chaudoir, on the examination of my specimen, concluded it to be the female of 4. geniculata of Klug, but the difference in general form is far greater than that which exists between the sexes of all other species whose legitimate partners are known, and besides the colour of the legs differs considerably. 14, Agra geniculata, Klug. Agra geniculata, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 80, pl. 1. fig. 4. A. robustior, nigra, pedibus saturate flavis, geniculis, tibiis apice tarsisque nigris, antennis nigris ; capite elongato, pone oculos conico; thorace medio subdilatato, postice valde constricto, antice subito angustato, dorso interstitiis latis levibus, epi- sternis sparsim punctatis ; elytris lineis foveolarum in strils subimpressis, foveolis viridi-tinctis, apice subflexuoso-trun- catis, angulis suturalibus haud productis. $ Metasterno medio, segmentis ventralibus 1-3 utrinque spatiis exiguis punctatis et sparsim pilosis ; tibiis simplicibus, tarsis nigro-hirsutis, Long. 7 lin. Santarem. Beaten from bushes on the borders of woods. I believe I also found this species at Para in the early years of collecting. 15. Agra subenea, Chaudoir. Agra subenea, Chaud. Ann, Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 120. A. valde angustata, nigro-enea, elytris cuprescentibus; capite angusto, pone oculos elongato, lateribus rotundato, vix atte- nuato, apud collum subiter constricto; thorace gracili, antice sensim attenuato, lineatim punctato, interstitiis latis levibus, 372 Mr. H. W. Bates on the episternis confertim punctatis; elytris angustis, pone medium paulo ampliatis, apice flexuoso-truncatis, angulis externis solum dentiformibus ; supra lineatim foveolatis, apices versus striatis. ¢ Antennis articulo 8° sequenti non breviori. Long. 53 lin. Hab. Ega. é (?) Robustior, colore obscurior ; capite latiori, thorace punc- tis majoribus, confluentibus ; abdomine glabro, pedibus sim- plicibus, femoribus paulo validioribus. Long. 53 lin. Hab. Para. Baron Chaudoir described this species from a female, agreeing in every respect with a second example of the same sex in my collection. I have no specimen of the male from the same locality, but believe the one found at Paré and described above belongs to the same species. I met with single individuals of the same or closely-allied species at other localities; it is impos- sible to decide whether they are distinct or not until further material is obtained.- Meantime the following diagnoses may be useful :— (a.) A. Chryseis, 2. Major, nigro-znea ; elytris late ceneis, antennis pedibusque ru- fescentibus ; thorace ut in 4. subenea, elytris truncaturé vix flexuosa, foveolis minoribus. Long. 64 lin. Hab. Santarem. (b.) A. curtula, &. Minor, robustior, nigro-gnea, elytris aeneo-cupreis; capite thorace latiori, oblongo-quadrato, angulis posticis rotundatis ; thorace prope apicem attenuato, dorso grosse rugoso-punc- tato, episternis plagiatim punctatis; elytris truncatura prope angulum externum sinuata, deinde usque ad suturam recta, foveolis plurimum confluentibus ; antennis immaculatis pedi- busque rufescentibus ; abdomine glabro, pedibus simplicibus. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Villa Nova. A. gracili affinis, (Lucas, Voy. de Castelnau, Entomologie, pl. ii. fig. 6, a.) If these two are to be considered as belonging to the same species as 4. subenea, I think it will be necessary to combine all three with 4. ruficornis of Klug, which is also an inhabitant of Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 373 Para. A. ruficornis seems to differ from the typical subenea only in its larger size and duller colouring. The following diagnosis, condensed from the description of Klug, will serve to facilitate comparison :— (c.) A. ruficornis, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 33, pl. il. fig. 6. Valde attenuata, nigro-znea, foveolis elytrorum violaceo-zneis, antennis pedibusque rufo-piceis; capite perangustato, tho- race profunde et irregulariter punctato; elytris apice trun- catis, tridentatis, dente externo acuto, secundo approximato obtuso, interno obtusissimo. ¢ Long. 63 lin. Hab, Para. 16. Agra femoralis, Chaudoir. Agra femoralis, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 120. A. angustata, znea, elytris cuprescentibus, antennis (articulo basali piceo excepto), tibiis tarsisque testaceo-rufis, femoribus piceis, nitidis; capite angusto-ovato, pone oculos minus elon- gato, rotundato-attenuato, oculis magnis; thorace angusto, antice sensim attenuato, grosse punctato, interstitiis glabris, tenuibus; elytris postice vix ampliatis, truncatura prope angulum externum sinuat& angulum medianum formante, deinde usque ad suturam fere recta; elytris foveolis in striis impressis ordinatis. 4 Metasterno, tibiis segmentisque ventralibus fere glabris ; tarsis anticis articulo basali a basi dilatato. Long. 64 lin. Ega. The species was not uncommon, but I have neglected to reserve specimens of both sexes for my own collection. 17. Agra tibialis, Chaudoir. (BE SX fic 272.) Agra tibialis, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 121. A. femorali forma, colore et sculptura similis ; major, elytris oblique subflexuoso-truncatis, nullomodo bisinuatis ; eenea, an- tennis tibiis tarsisque rufescentibus, femoribus nigro-piceis ; corpore subtus utroque sexu glabro. ¢ Tarsis anticis articulo primo abrupte dilatato. @ Tarsis anticis articulo primo simplici, antennis articulo 8’° nullomodo abbreviato. Long. 8—9 lin. 374 Mr. H. W. Bates on the Widely distributed over the Amazons region; being found at Par4 and at Ega. Ina Para example before me the femora are pitchy-rufous and the elytra more coarsely foveolated than in the Evga specimens. f. Vertice utrinque pluripunctato piloso. 18. Agra mesta, Chaudoir. Agra mesta, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 123. A. robusta, nigra, nitida; capite ovali, pone oculos rotundato- attenuato, pluripunctato; thorace medio dilatato, antice valde subito attenuato, supra grosse lineatim confluenter punctato; elytris truncatis, angulis suturalibus et externis valde productis, supra alternatim striato-punctatis et striato- foveolatis ; antennis pedibusque piceo-nigris. @ Antennis articulo 8° nullomodo abbreviato. Long. 83—93 lin. Ega. fo) b. Elytris distincte punctato-striatis. a. Thorace toto dense punctulato. 19. Agra pulchella, Chaudoir. * Agra pulchella, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 126. A. nigro-enea, elytris cupreis, nitidis, certo situ viridi-mican- tibus; capite ovali, postice elongato, rotundato-attenuato, oc- cipite lineola impressa ; thorace subcylindrico, prope apicem subito’ attenuato, punctulato, linea impressa antica dorsali, lateribus tenuiter carinatis, episternis crebre punctulatis, glabris; elytris apice truncatis, angulis externis leviter pro- ductis, suturalibus acutis, dorso punctulato-striatis, intersti- tiis planis; antennis rufescentibus. ¢ Metasterno, segmentis ventralibus (anali excepto), medio laxe punctatis et pilosis. ? Corpore subtus glabro; antennis normalibus. Long. 4—43 lin. Ega. 20. Agra brevicollis, Klug. Agra brevicollis, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 25, pl. 1. fig. 9. A. nigro-znea, elytris cupreis, certo situ viridi-micantibus; capite angustato, postice rotundato-attenuato ; thorace brevi, sub- conico, prope apicem subito attenuato, supra lineola dorsali impresso, punctulato, punctis seepius confluentibus, subtus On Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 37 distinctius punctulatis ; elytris truncatis, dente externo acuto, interno obtuso, é Segmentis ventralibus medio cinereo-tomentosis ;_ meta- sterno sub-hirto. yas Long. 53 lin. Para. This species, which I did not myself meet with, is evi- dently closely allied to 4. pulchella ; it is larger, however, and the ventral segments are much more densely pilose in the male. 21. Agra Chaudoirii, n. sp. M. de Chaudoir has kindly drawn up for me the following de- scription of this species :— “Nigra; thorace nigro-zeneo; elytris rubro- aut virescenti- ‘cupreis, anguste viridi-marginatis, fulgentibus; antennis extus piceis, articulis singulis nigro-terminatis. Caput elongato-ovatum, subangustum, basi sat abrupte stran- gulatum, lave, basi uni-foveolatum, utrinque unipunctatum, oculis sat prominulis. Thorax quoad formam ut in 4. Cy- therea, capite Jongior, eoque cum oculis fere crassior, latitu- dine duplo. longior, parce pilosus, ovatus, crassiusculus, antice breviter attenuatus, lateribus ad apicem brevissime, ante basin obsolete sinuatis, totus sat dense regulariterque punctatus, carinula laterali subelevata, utrinque subcrenata, integra. HKlytra fere omnino ut in A. Cytherea, thorace antice fere duplo latiora, posterius ampliata, modice elongata, apice suboblique truncata, bidentata, dente externo acuto, suturali subproducto, obtuso, intra dentem externum sub- sinuato ; supra modice conyexa, sat tenue punctato-striata, interstitiis planiusculis, punctorum seriebus in 3° et 5° fere obsoletis.. Femora ¢ valida, pectore medio et vitta latius- cula abdominis fere ad apicem dense pubescente-punctulatis, Femina subtus glabra, pube murina.” Long. 63 lin. Ega. In the Collections of Baron Chaudoir and H. W. Bates. 22, Agra bicostata, n. sp. The following is a description of this species drawn up by M. de Chaudoir :— ‘“* Przecedenti valde similis, eadem magnitudo, color idem; differt capite paulo angustiori, basi minus abrupte strangulato, tho- race antice brevius attenuato, costa laterali evidentiori, et VOL, Il. THIRD SERIES, PART V.—SEPT. 1865, EE 376 Mr. H. W. Bates on the fere duplici, supra medio apice breviter costato; elytra similia, paulo minora, apice acute tridentata, dente suturali sat producto, intermedio minore, apice haud rotundato ; antennis articulis singulis apice haud nigrescentibus; ¢ abdomine subtus basi glabra, segmentis tribus ultimis medio tantum pubescentibus.” Long. 6 lin. Ega. Collections of Baron Chaudoir and H. W. Bates. 23. Agra brevicornis, n. sp. “Przecedenti primo intuitu similis, minor. Caput subelongato- quadratum, basi abrupte quadrato-constrictum, lve, basi unifoveolatum et utrinque unipunctatum; oculis sat prominu- lis. Thorax quoad formam non differt, attamen paulo bre- vior, supra minus confertim et sat irregulariter punctatus, supra medio apice subtricostatus, carina laterali elevata, integra, exteriori subobsoleta. LElytra paulo breviora, nec latiora, minora, similiter punctato-striata, apice recte trun- cata, dentibus non prominulis, nec rotundatis. Antenne breviores, thoracis basin vix attingentes, articulis tribus basali- bus nigris, ceteris rufis. Color obscure cupreus.” (Chaudoir.) Long. 53 lin. @ Para. One example in my own Collection. 24, Agra rubrocuprea, n. sp. M. de Chaudoir has given me the following description of my specimens of this species :— “A. @neipenni certe affinis, differt capite evidenter latiori, magis rotundato, oculis sat prominulis, thorace paulo minus elongato, antice brevius attenuato, ante basin vix strangulato, costa laterali magis elevata; elytris basin versus -minus attenuatis, magis parallelis, apicis angulo suturali subacu- tiore. g subtus pectore medio, abdominisque toti fere ad apicem vitta lata media pubescenti-punctulatis, pube murina; ¢ glabra; colore nigro-picea, nitida, thorace virescenti, elytris rubro-cupreis, splendidis ; antennee extus ferruginez, articulis singulis nigro-terminatis; pédes rufo-picei: ¢ ris femora parum incrassata.”’ Long. 43 lin. This brilliant little species occurred only at St. Paulo, and was very rare. Col]. Baron Chaudoir and H. W. Bates. Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 377 25. Agra eneipennis, Chaudoir. Agra eneipennis, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 127. A. pulchelle similis; gracilis, nigro-zenea, thorace elytrisque subobscure viridi-zeneis; capite angustato-oblongo, pone oculos modice rotundato-attenuato, vertice foveola impresso ; thorace elongato, postice coarctato, apicem versus subito attenuato, omnino punctulato ; elytris gracilibus, intra dentem externum valde sinuatis, supra punctato-striatis ; antennis rufescentibus, é 2 subtus glabra. Long. 43 lin. Ega. Coll. Baron Chaudoir and H. W. Bates. 26. Agra aurata, n. sp. A. rubrocupree similis, differt capite magis ovato, thorace medio crassiori, lateribus magis rotundatis, ante basin evi- dentius strangulato, czterum similiter punctato ; elytris dentibus apicalibus, presertim intermedio, acutioribus. é pectore medio tantum punctulato-piloso, abdomine toto levi, glabro ; femoribus anterioribus coxisque posticis subtus basin versus punctato-pilosis; elytris subluteo-auratis, cupreo viridique micantibus; antennis ferrugineis, articulis duobus basalibus piceis : specimine subimmaturo, Long. 44 lin. Villa Nova. One specimen. 27. Agra gaudiola, n. sp. A. parva, nigro-znea, elytris late purpureo-cupreis; capite ovato, pone oculos minus elongato, latiusculo, collum versus subito strangulato; thorace postice angustato, antice prope apicem attenuato, supra regulariter punctulato; elytris bre- vibus, apice obtuse subtridentatis, recte truncatis ; antennis ferrugineis, articulis tribus basalibus obscuratis. Long. 3 lin. @. Ega. One example. f. Thorace plagiatim punctato. 28. Agra excavata, Klug. A. excavata, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 20, pl. i. fig. 6. A, nigro-znea; capite breviter ovato, pone oculos paulo elon- gato, rotundato-attenuato, vertice foveola media orbiculari; EE2 378 Mr. H. W. Bates on the thorace brevi, antice subito attenuato, dorso plagiatim con- fluenter grosse punctato; elytris punctato-striatis, apice sinuato-truncatis, bidentatis ; antennis robustis, rufescentibus. Long. 5 lin. ¢. Beaten in some numbers from bushes, on one occasion at Santarem. 29. Agra varilosa, Klug. Agra variolosa, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 18, pl. i. fig. 5. A. nigro-znea; corpore toto piloso; capite (ut in 4. excavata) breviter ovato, vertice foveola et linea longitudinali impresso ; thorace longiori, multo angustiori, antice sensim attenuato, supra grosse confluenter punctato; elytris truncatis, biden- tatis, supra punctato-striatis, striis alternis foveolatis ; anten- nis robustis, ferrugineis. Long. 5 lin. 2. Taken once only, at Tunantins on the Upper Amazons. Klug’s specimens came from Bahia. 30. Agra biseriata, Chaudoir. Agra biseriata, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 129. A. variolosé similis, at minor, eneo-fusca, pilosa; capite an- gustiori, pone oculos minus quadrato, postice punctato-piloso ; thorace antice sensim attenuato, lateribus pilosis; elytris subsinuato-truncatis, bidentatis, supra punctato-striatis, strils secunda tertiaque sex-foveolatis, pilosis; antennis gracilibus pedibusque testaceo-rufescentibus. é Metasterno medio dense breviter piloso, abdomine glabro. Long. 44 lin. Ega. One of the commonest species on the leaves of low trees. 31. Agra foveigera, Chaudoir. Agra foveigera, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 130. A. biseriat@ similis, major, vix pubescens, nigra, vix metallica ; capite breviter ovato, postice haud punctato, vertice foveola magna; thorace gracili, antice sensim attenuato, lateribus haud pilosis ; elytris sinuato-truncatis, dentibus duobus elongatis ; supra punctato-striatis, striis 2°44, 4‘, 6' foveolatis, inter- stitiis planis; mesosterni episternis punctatis; antennis pedibusque gracilibus, nigris. $ Metasterno medio dense hirsuto; tibiis posticis arcuatis, intus late sulcatis. Long. 53—6 lin. Ega. Much less common than 4. biseriata. Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 379 32. Agra immersa, Klug. Agra immersa, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 21, pl. i. fig. 7. A. biseriate simillima, differt elytris cupreis. Long. 4 lin. Para. Collected by Sieber. I think it very likely this is only a geographical variety of the same stock as A. biseriata. I do not find the species among my own Para collections. 33. Agra chalcoptera, Klug. Agra chalcoptera, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 23, pl. i. fig. 8. », elegans, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 130. A, biseriate similis, gracilis, nigro-nea, pilosa, elytris viridi- zeneis vel viridi-cupreis; antennis valde elongatis, rufescentibus, basi piceis ; capite ovato, pone oculos rotundato-attenuato ; thorace a medio usque ad apicem attenuato, lateribus cano- pilosis ; elytris truncatis, angulis suturalibus haud productis ; femoribus piceis, tibiis tarsisque rufescentibus. $ Metasterno et abdominis basi medio punctato-pilosis ; tibiis posticis simplicibus. Long. 43—6 lin. Equally common with A. biseriata at Ega; also found at Para, where Klug’s specimens were taken many years ago by Sieber. 34. Agra graminea, D. sp. This species has a general resemblance in form to 4. chalcoptera, Klug, but differs in its much more slender figure, the bright -brassy-green colour of its thorax and elytra, and in other points. Baron Chaudoir has given me the following comparative descrip- tion of it :— “Color fere ut in 4. chalcoptera, Klug, (elegans, Chaud.), sed supra potius viridis, non cupreus; antenne pedesque simi- liter colorati. Quoad formam, A. tenui, Chaud., (Rev. & Mag. Zool. 1863, p. 9) affinis; caput pone oculos magis attenuatum, thorax pone medium paulo magis incrassatus, intra carinam externam elevatam et juxta lineam medianam evidentius irregulariter punctatus. Elytra paulo latiora, minus parallela, postice magis ampliata, apice omnino recté truncata, angulo externo minus acuto, striis multo grossius punctatis, interstitiis convexiusculis. Subter levis, nitida. 4. chalcoptera differt capite multo angustiori, basi haud foveolato, linea tenul tantum notato; thorace magis filiforme, omnino aliter punc- tato; elytris angustioribus, interstitiis alternis haud seriato- 380 Mr. H. W. Bates on the foveolatis, apiceque obsolete dentatis ; corpore subtus vires- cente, paging: superioris colore gramineo.”’ Long. 5 lin. I found one example only of this pretty species, at Ega, on the Upper Amazons. 35, Agra exarata, Klug. Agra exarata, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 88, pl. ii. fig. 9. A. nigra, elytris eeneis, subcyaneis ; capite ovato, pone oculos modice elongato, rotundato-attenuato (¢ ), levi, lineola im- pressa occipitali; thorace robusto, medio ampliato, antice apicem versus attenuato, rugoso-punctato, haud piloso; elytris postice ampliatis, tridentatis, supra punctato-striatis, striis ramulis interstitiorum interruptis; antennis pedibusque piceo-nigris. $ Metasterno segmentisque ventralibus medio et femoribus basi subtus dense rufo-pilosis, subcrispatis. Long. 8 lin. One example, taken at Tunantins on the Upper Amazons. Klug’s specimen, taken at Para, was a female. 36. Agra cytherea, Thomson. (PI. XX. fig. 3, %.) Agra cytherea, Thomson, Archiv. Entom. i. p. 134. A. nigro znea, thorace zneo, elytris splendide viridi-metallicis, cupreo micantibus ; capite maris pone oculos subconico, feminz rotundato-attenuato; thorace glabro, rugoso-punc- tato; elytris elongatis, postice ampliatis, bisinuato-truncatis, subtridentatis, dente externo solum producto, punctato- striatis, interstitiis planis ; antennis rufo-piceis, basi aneo- piceis, pedibus eeneo-piceis. $ Metasterno segmentisque ventralibus medio densissime pilo- sis; femoribus anticis interdum basi pilosis. Long. 73—83 lin. Ega. A common species, on trees in the forest. 37. Agra punctato-striata, Chaudoir, Agra punctato-striata, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 134, A. cytheree simillima, paulo minor; capite maris pone oculos rotundato-attenuato ut in femina, haud conico; thorace supra magis punctato; colore piceo, thorace supra zneo; elytris viridi-auratis, cupreo micantibus. Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 381 $ Metasterno segmentisque ventralibus medio minus dense pilosis. Long. 7 lin. This species, which I cannot think is more than a local form of the same stock as 4, cytherea, occurred at Para and on the Lower Amazons, 4. cytherea being confined to the neighbourhood of Ega on the Upper Amazons. Baron Chaudoir, on whose autho- rity I have referred my specimens to his species, records a wide range for it, he having two specimens, one from the Rio Negro (Amazons) and the other from South Brazil. 38. Agra varians, Chaudoir. Agra varians, Chaud. Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 133. A, cythere@ forma similis, differt in colore, certe species dis- tinctissima ; nigra, elytris obscure viridibus, interdum zeneis et rubro-cupreis; capite pone oculos paulo latiori, feminz subquadrato, maris rotundato-attenuato ; elytris apice triden- tato, dente intermedio validiori, suturali obtuso, supra magis fortiter punctato-striatis. Long. 7—8 lin. Sull more common than 4. cytherea at Ega. I convinced my- se!f on the spot that the two species kept themselves perfectly distinct, and no intermediate forms were found which could prove that they ever intercrossed. 39. Agra optima, n. sp. M. de Chaudoir has given me the following description of this species :— “4. splendid, Dej., valde affinis, forsan hujus speciei femina. Differt capite postice latiori, pone oculos magis rotundato, thorace crassiori, lateribus etiam magis rotundato; elytris paulo brevioribus, apice tridentatis sed dente suturali haud producto, obtuso, nec reflexo; antennis brevioribus, articulo 8° breviusculo: elytris colore rubro-cupreis, splendidis.” Long. 93 lin. @. Villa Nova. M. de Chaudoir adds, after comparing my specimen with De- jean’s type in his own collection, that the affinity with 4. splen- dida (Dej.) is very great, and that, excepting the sexual diffe- rences, he finds no distinctive character except in the conformation of the tip of the elytra, which usually offers no difference in the 382 Mr. H. W. Bates on the two sexes; this case, however, might offer an exception. De- jean’s example of 4. splendida came from Latreille, and is supposed to have been received from Peru. 40. Agra cuprea, Klug. Agra cuprea, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 41, pl. in. fig. 2. A. varianti colore simillima, obscure zenea, vel viridis vel aneo- cuprea; differt corpore multo robustiori, elytris apice valde acute tridentatis; capite ovato, pone oculos rotundato- attenuato (3), subquadrato, vertice leviter impresso ; thorace robusto, medio subdilatato, supra interstitiis lavibus, latius- culis ; elytris punctato-striatis, striis alternis serie punctorum majorum, apice acute tridentatis ; antennis piceo-rufis, articulis basalibus pedibusque nigris. é Elytris angulo suturali modice producto; metasterno, femo- ribus anticis posticisque intus, et segmento ventrali ultimo dense rufo-pilosis. 2 Elytris angulo suturali in dente longissimo producto, antennis articulo 8" breviusculo. Long. 83 lin. Ega and St. Paulo; Upper Amazons. 41. Agra laticeps, n. sp. A. robusta, nigro-znea, elytris obscure viridi-eneis ; capite late ovato, pone oculos paulo elongato, citd rotundato- attenuato, vertice haud impresso; thorace medio valde di- latato, antice subiter sinuato-attenuato, supra plano, lineatim subirregulariter punctato, haud rugoso, carina laterali pro- minula, episterno sparsim punctato; elytris latiusculis, apice truncatis, angulo suturali parum producto, supra obscure zeneo-viridibus, punctato-striatis, striis 2™44, 4, 6 serie punctorum impressis ; antennis nigris, articulis singulis basi rufis; pedibus nigris. é Segmentis ventralibus postice (basali etiam antice) sparsim punctato-pilosis. Long. 9 lin. Ega. Rare. 42. Agra pheogona, n. sp. Baron Chaudoir has supplied the following description of this remarkable species :-— “A. Feisthameli (Buquet) valde affinis; differt magnitudine mi- Species of Agra of the Amazons Region. 383 nore, capite pone oculos minus elongato, magis trigono, cum palpis nigro, antennis gracilioribus, articulis duobus baseos paulo obscurioribus ; thorace paulo breviori, multo minus et subtilius et ad lineam mediam vix punctato, episternis lavibus ; elytrorum striis in fundosubtiliter rugosis, genubusque nigris.” Long. 7 lin. ¢ The antennz (with the exception of the two basal joints) and the legs (except the black knees) are clear reddish-yellow ; the sutural and external angles of the elytra are produced into long teeth, Villa Nova. One example. Klug has also described the following species, which seem to me to differ from all the foregoing and which I did not myself meet with. ‘Their place in this genus is uncertain. 43. Agra multiplicata, Klug. Agra multiplicata, Klug, Entom. Monogr. p. 39, pl. iil. fig. 1. A. nigro-znea; occipite subimpresso ; thorace subelongato ; elytris punctato-striatis, apice tridentatis, purpurascentibus, supra transversim plicatis; capite attenuato-elongato; an- tennis rufo-piceis. Long. 63 lin. ¢? Para. 44. Agra clavipes, Klug. Agra clavipes, Klug, Jahrbiicher, p. 58. A. picea ; capite postice vix attenuato, obsolete impresso; thorace cicatricoso, conico; elytris subeneis, punctato-striatis, apice tridentatis. Long. 8 lin. & Para. Klug compares it with 4. femorata; but it evidently belongs to a quite different group and may be a slightly immature example of his 4. cuprea. Klug was not aware of the sexual differences in the thickness of the femora. ( 385 ) XVII. New Species of Agra in the Collection of Mr. W. W. Saunpers. By H. W. Bares, F.Z.S. [Read 1st May, 1865.] Wuitst engaged in studying this difficult genus in the preparation of the foregoing paper on the Amazonian species, I have been en- trusted with the examination of the Collection of Agr@ belonging to Mr. W. W. Saunders, and finding therein four well-marked new species, have obtained permission to describe them by way of supplement, Agra Valentina. (Pl. XX. fig. 7, 2.) A. robusta, nigra; capite ovato, pone oculos usque ad collum sensim rotundato-attenuato ; antennis nigris, articulis (2 ) 8— 11 abbreviatis, 8° brevissimo, ovato; thorace capite haud longiori, medio Jato, antice subito attenuato, episternis con- vexis, dorso plano, postice vage punctato; elytris oblique truncatis, apice suturali dehiscenti, angulo externo acuto, dorso striato-punctato, punctis latera versus majoribus, re- motioribus, striis 2-3 foveolis variis; pedibus nigris, tibiis compressis, tarsis articulo ultimo lato. Long 9 lin. 9 Closely allied to 4. latipes, Chaudoir (Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p- 112), but more robust, and the elytra quite free from metallic lustre. ‘The head is similar in shape, i. e. somewhat regularly oval and impuncetate, but it is a little shorter; the thorax differs in being much broader in the middle, and the breadth is still fur- ther increased by the convexity of the episterna; the surface is more even and the punctures more scattered and less deeply im- pressed. The elytra are of the same shape as in 4. latipes, being sinuated before the middle and then again dilated before the apex, but the rows of punctures differ greatly in having each a number of much larger punctures, and in the lateral rows having all the punctures larger and more distant. The legs and tibie are similar in form, but the basal joint of each tarsus is rather broader and has a mere rounded outline ( ¢ ) than the same sex of 4. latipes ; the claw joint is broad. One example, from Columbia (Venezuela). 386 Mr. H. W. Bates on New Species of Agra Agra dominula, (Pl, XX. fig. 5, 9+) A. nigro-picea, nitida; antennis pedibusque piceo-rufis, geniculis obscurioribus ; capite oblongo-ovato, pone oculos oblongo, imprimis sensim, deinde collum versus citius attenuato ; thorace capite vix longiori, medio vix dilatato, apicem versus leniter attenuato, episternis convexis, impunctatis, dorso trans- versim strigoso, irregulariter punctato, punctis haud profundis ; elytris apice oblique flexuoso-truncatis, angulis externis breviter productis, acutis; dorso profunde punctato-striatis, punctis raro confluentibus, interstitiis angustis, levibus ; pedibus validis, tibiis apices versus compresso-dilatatis, tarsis articulo primo dilatato, unguiculari lato. Long. 11 lin. Allied to 4. erythropus (Dejean), but much larger and propor- tionally more elongated and the elytra far more deeply and strongly punctate-striate. The lateral lobes of the mentum are elongate and subacute, and the species therefore belongs to the same small section as 4. erythropus and A. latipes. The four terminal joints of the antenne are shorter and more slender than the preceding, the eighth being very short and oval, almost globular in shape. There is no trace of metallic glimmer on the body, but the whole surface is of a fine lustrous dark pitchy-black, the antennze dark reddish and the legs rather lighter and clearer pitchy-red, with the knees dusky. The tibicze are compressed, but are not per- ceptibly dilated until towards the apex, and the basal joint of each tarsus (¢) is much broader than the others, with its sides rounded. This grand species, of which a single example is in Mr. Saun- ders’ Collection, is from Peru. Agra Saundersii. (Pl. XX. fig. 4, $.) A. magna, nigra, nitida, femoribus (apicibus exceptis) flavis; capite elongato-quadrato ; thorace angusto, antice attenuato, constricto, dorso grosse lineatim punctato, episternis vix con- vexis, parce punctatis ; elytris postice ampliatis, oblique trun- eatis, angulo suturali valde producto, externo mucronato, dorso profunde lineatim foveolatis, foveolis discretis, fundo metallicis, interstitiis reticulatis. Long. 12 lin. 3 Closely allied to 4. geniculata (Klug) and having a great resem- blance to it in shape and colour, but it is nearly twice the length and bulky in proportion. The head is very much prolonged behind the eyes and but very slightly narrowed (in straight lines) to in the Collection of Mr. W. W. Saunders. 387 the neck, at which point it is strongly constricted on all sides. The elytra are proportionally more dilated near the apex than in 4. geniculata, and the sutural angle is much more produced, resem- bling in this respect 4.rufescens ; their surface is marked with im- pressed rows of distinct regular fovez, the bottoms of which have a slight brassy lustre, and the interstices both longitudinal and transversal are narrow, so that the surface appears almost reticu- lated. The legs are robust and shining black, except the middle part of the femora, which is yellow; the middle and hind tarsi are elongated, the basal joints being also elongated and slender. The antennz are shining black (apical joints wanting). Male.—Middle of metasternum and a space in the middle of the hind part of the three basal ventral segments punctured and pubescent. Anterior tarsi with the basal joint rotundate-dilatate ; middle tibize with a strong tooth within (and hirsute) near the apex ; posterior tibiz strongly bent inwardly in the middle and thickened and hirsute thence to the apex. This large and handsome species is from Peru; there is a single specimen only in Mr. Saunders’ Collection. Agra occipitalis. (Pl. XX. fig. 1, $.) A. nigra, thorace elytrisque zeneis, his certo situ subeupreo-mi- cantibus ; capite elliptico, ante oculos modice protenso, pone oculos valde elongato, vix attenuato; thorace angusto, grosse lineatim punctato ; elytris flexuoso-truncatis, angulis suturali- bus nullomodo, externis breviter, productis, supra lineatim foveolatis (haud striato-impressis ), foveolis interdum elongatis, fundo multipunctatis ; antennis pedibusque nigro-piceis. é tibiis posticis leniter incurvatis, a medio usque ad apicem intus dense hirsutis. Long. 6 lin. ¢ Allied to 4. merens, Chaud. (Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1861, p. 119) and A. scrutatrix (ante, p. 370); the head is broader and less narrowed behind the eyes than in the ¢ of 4. merens, and the insect differs from both species in its brighter brassy colour, with faint coppery reflexions towards the apex of the elytra. The head is of an elliptical shape, and the part behind the eyes is much longer than the anterior part. The fovez on the elytra have no trace of lying in impressed lines as is the case with the species above quoted, and some of the fovez are elongated, with a few obscure bluish punctures at their bottoms. One example, from Brazil. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XX. Fig. 1. Agra occipitalis, Bates. ¢. 2. ,, tibialis, Chaudoir. @. 3. 4, cytherea, Thomson. ¢. 4. ,, Saundersii, Bates. @. 5. 4, dominula, Bates. 9. 6 », anguinea, Bates. @. 7 5, Valentina, Bates. 9. ( 389 ) XVIII. Descriptions of some New Species of Hymenop terous Insects belonging to the Families Thynnide, Masa- ride and Apide. By Freperick Smita, V.P. Ent. Soc. [Read Ist May, 1861. ] Tue insects described in the present paper, with one or two ex- ceptions, are the property of F’, Du Boulay, Esq., who has placed them in my hands for examination. Amongst these are some of the finest species of the various genera to which they belong, particularly, I may point out, those of the rare genus Paragia, three new species of which add greatly to the interest of this small collection of Australian Hymenoptera, But the most remarkable insect described is a bee, belonging to the section of leaf-cutting bees; this I have characterised as forming a new genus (Thaumatosoma), principally from the circumstance of its possessing elongated capitate antenne ; I know but of one other instance in which a bee has true capitate antenne ; this is in a species of Tetralonia from Brazil.* Fam. THYNNIDZ. Genus THynnuvs. Thynnus ventralis. T. luteus; antennis abdominisque segmentis apicalibus nigris ; alis fuscis. Female.—Length 10 lines. Pale luteous, the antenne and tips of the mandibles black ; a transverse black line on the vertex, from which two angular stains emanate, each enclosing one of the posterior ocelli; the pit, in which the anterior ocellus is situated, is also black ; all the sutures of the thorax black; the wings dark brown; the basal joint of the tarsi more or less obscurely ferruginous, the rest of ® A description of this species is given, post, p. 398. There are three genera of “ long-horned bees,’’ in which the males have their antennz fre- quently as Jong as, or in some cases even longer than, the body. The first genus established, Eucera, is at once known from the others by the species having only two submarginal cells in the anterior wings; the other genera, Tetralonia and Melissodes, have each three submarginal cells, but Tetralonia has 6-jointed maxillary palpi and 4-jointed labial palpi, whereas Melissodes has both maxillary and labial palpi 4-jointed. 390 Mr. F. Sunith’s Descriptions the joints black ; abdomen with the fourth and following segments black; the fourth with two transverse ovate yellow macula, the fifth with two minute spots; beneath black. Hab. Swan River. Genus Aivurus. Atlurus agilis. JE. niger; capite thoraceque ferrugineo-variegatis ; abdomine ferrugineo, segmento primo nigro; alis hyalinis, nervuris nigris. ' Male. — Length 6 lines. Black ; the clypeus, the scape in front, and the mandibles, fer- ruginous; the cheeks with a long cinereous beard; the head closely and coarsely punctured. The thorax beneath, the legs, a large macula beneath the wings, and the pro- and meso-thorax ferruginous, the latter with an oblong black patch extending from its base to the apex; the scutellum ferruginous; the post-scutellum yellow; the sides of the metathorax clothed with long cinereous pubescence ;_ the wings hyaline, the nervures black; the legs more or less black or fuscous above; abdomen ferruginous, with the basal segment black; the thorax is coarsely punctured, the abdomen with distant shallow punctures, except the basal seg- ment, which is closely and finely punctured. Hab. Swan River. Genus RHAGIGASTER. Rhagigaster simillimus. R. niger; macula sub alis abdominisque segmentis duobus api- ealibus ferrugineis; tibiis tarsisque testaceis. Male.—Length 8 lines. Black; head and thorax rugose and covered with short cinereous pubescence; a large oblong ferruginous macula beneath the wings, which are hyaline, their nervures black; the tibiae and tarsi rufo-testaceous, with the claw joint fuscous; abdomen black and shining, the two apical segments ferruginous, the tip of the ultimate one black. Hab. Swan River. Rhagigaster flavifrons. R. niger; capite antice flavo ; thorace ferrugineo. Female.—Length 8 lines. Black; the head distantly and finely punctured; the anterior portion of the head as high as the vertex of the eyes, and the of some New Species of Hymenopterous Insects. 391 mandibles yellow; the head subquadrate, slightly narrowed be- hind ;_ thorax ferruginous, finely and closely punctured, with a number of larger scattered punctures; the articulations of the legs and the tarsi rufo-testaceous ; abdomen elongate and shining, the second segment transversely striated, the apex ferruginous and longitudinally striated. Hab. Swan River. Fam. MASARIDZ. Genus Paraeta, Shuck. This genus was established in the year 1837, at which time only a single example was known; since that period nine addi- tional species have been described. I here add three new and beau- tiful species to the list, making the total number thirteen. In the generic characters given by Shuckard and drawn from the type Paragia decipiens, the trophi are not characterized, but Saussure has figured them in his Monograph of the Family Masa- ride, in which this genus is placed—the maxillary palpi being six- jointed, the labiai four-jointed. ‘That this is not a social genus of wasps, I think is proved by an examination of the tarsal claws, which are bifid, a character nowhere found hitherto amongst the social Vespide, but characteristic of all the solitary species. The type specimen described by Shuckard is now in the British Museum, and proves to be in a discoloured, bad condition; I therefore add, in the list of the species of the genus, a more cor- rect description, drawn from specimens obtained from Adelaide in the finest state of preservation. All the known species are from Australia and Tasmania. 1. Paragia decipiens, Shuck. Trans. Ent. Soc. ii. 82, pl. vill. figs 35:2 Sauss. Mon. Masar. p. 54. P, nigra, opaca; abdomine sulphureo. Female.—Length 9 lines. Black, opaque; head and thorax shagreened, with two confluent yellow spots between the antennz ; a narrow interrupted line on the anterior margip of the prothorax and a minute spot beneath the wings sulphur-yellow; wings dark fuscous, palest at their posterior margins ; abdomen sulphur-yellow, the base of the first segment black, from which a narrow black line emanates and runs down the upper surface of the segment to its posterior margin. Male.—This sex has the clypeus, an abbreviated line on the inner margin of the eyes, two minute spots between the antennee, VOL. II, THIRD SERIES, PART v.—SEPT. 1865, FF 392 Mr. F. Smith’s Descriptions and the scape in front, yellow ; the anterior tibiz are yellow in front; the second segment of the abdomen is produced beneath into a large pointed tubercle. Hab. Adelaide. 2. Paragia tricolor, Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc. ser. 2, i. 41, pl. v. figs 152d\. 5, Smithii, Sauss. Mon. Masar. p. 55, 3, t. 2, fig. 1, ¢. Hab. Adelaide. 8. Paragia Saussurii, Smith, Cat. Vesp. p. 2, 3, 2. » tricolor, Sauss. Mon. Masar. p. 54, 2, 2 (nec Smith). Hab. Perth, W. Australia. 4. Paragia odyneroides, Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc. ser. 2, i. 42, pl. ‘v. fig. 2: Sauss. Mon. Masar. p. 56, 4. Hab. Hunter River, Australia. 5. Paragia australis, Sauss. Mon, Masar. p. 57, 5, 3, 2. Hab. Tasmania. 6. Paragia bicolor, Sauss. Mon, Masar. p. 58, 6, . Hab. Australia. 7. Paragia bidens, Sauss. Mon. Masar. p. 59,7, 8, ¢. Hab. Adelaide. 8. Paragia predator, Sauss. Mon. Masar. p. 59, 8, ¢. Hab. Australia. 9. Paragia pictifrons, Smith, Cat. Vesp. p. 2, 9, 2. Hab. Swan River. 10. Paragia deceptor, Smith, Trans. Ent. Soc, ser. 3, 1, 56, 9. Hab. Adelaide. 11. Paragia calida. P. nigra; capite thoraceque profunde punctatis, flavoque varie- oO 9 ’ gatis; abdomine aurantiaco; segmentis primo et tertio nigris; alis fuscis. Male. —Length 6 lines. Black; the head and thorax thickly covered with deep con- fluent punctures; the clypeus, an oblong-shaped macula widest at the apex above it, and a line on the inner orbit of the eyes not reaching their summit, yellow; the prothorax bordered with orange along its anterior margin; the tibie and tarsi ferruginous, the anterior tibize with a fuscous stain behind, and the intermediate and posterior pairs with a similar stain outside ; the wings fuscous, of some New Species of Hymenopterous Insects. 393 the anterior pair very dark along the anterior margin; abdomen bright orange-red, the first and third segments black, the latter with its posterior margin narrowly bordered with orange, the margin waved anteriorly; the basal segment with a central longi- tudinal line, not deeply impressed, and the line is orange towards the posterior margin of the segment ; the second segment narrowly black at its basal margin, most broadly so in the centre. Var.—The orange border to the prothorax recurved at the lateral angles, and enclosing a triangular black shape on the face of the truncation ;. the compressed tooth on the lateral margins of the metathorax orange-red ; the basal segment of the abdomen with only two united bilobed black spots. Hab, Adelaide. 12. Paragia venusta. P. nigra, aurantiaca multipicta; abdominis basi et segmento tertio aurantiacis; alis hyalinis, anticis margine anteriori fusco. Female.—Length 5 lines. Black, opaque ; the clypeus, a coronet-shaped spot above and a line at the inner and outer orbits of the eyes, not reaching to their summit, the prothorax, an epaulet over the tegule, the scutellum, a minute spot on the mesothorax before the scutellum, a spot on each side of the metathorax, another beneath the wings, and the legs, all orange-yellow ; the coxe black; the wings hyaline, with the anterior margin of the superior pair dark fuscous ; the basal segment of the abdomen, an interrupted narrow band at the basal margin of the second, the third segment, the apical margin of the two following, and the sixth segment entirely, orange-yellow ; beneath, the third segment entirely, and the apical margin of the first and second segments, orange. Hab. Swan River. 13. Paragia vespiformis. P. nigra; capite thoraceque flavo-variegatis ; abdomine fasciis quinque flavis; alis subhyalinis. Female.—Length 7 lines. Black and opaque; the clypeus, base of the mandibles exte- riorly, a broad stripe along the inner margin of the eyes extend- ing upwards from the base of the mandibles to the insertion of the antenne, a shorter narrow stripe above the broad one, and also a short thin line above each antenna, yellow; behind the eyes there is also a yellow stripe; a narrow line on the anterior FF2 394 Mr. F. Smith’s Deseriptions margin of the thorax, a minute spot in the middle of the mesothorax, the inner margin of the tegula, the posterior margin of the scu- tellum, and a large ovate spot on each side of the metathorax, yellow; a subtriangular spot beneath the wings, and the legs beneath, yellow ; a yellow spot on the intermediate and posterior coxe, all the trochanters, the base of the anterior and interme- diate coxe, as well as the anterior tibia, black; the wings sub- hyaline, the nervures black; a broad yellow fascia, slightly inter- rupted in the middle, on the margin of the basal segment of the abdomen ; the three following segments have each a narrower interrupted fascia; on the apical margin of the fifth segment an’ entire fascia, emarginate in the middle; beneath yellow, the second segment having a transverse black spot at its basal margin, and the three following having each a narrow central black stripe at the basal margin; the sixth segment black, with the tip more or less yellow. Hab. Swan River. Fam. APID #&, Leach. Genus THauMATOSoMA, n. g. Labial palpi four-jointed, the two basal joints elongate, their length about equal, the third and fourth joints minute and sub- clavate, inserted at the apex of the second joint; the labial palpi and the labium of equal length. The maxillary palpi two-jointed, minute; the basal joint short, stout and cylindric, the second about the same length as the first, but much more slender and pointed at the apex. The basal lobe of the maxille shorter than the apical one, which is elongate, lanceolate and curved. Head as wide as the thorax; eyes large, lateral and elongate-ovate ; the ocelli three in a triangle on the vertex, the posterior pair placed in a line with the posterior margin of the eyes ; the labrum elongate, produced and rounded anteriorly; the antenne capitate (in the male), elongate, reaching to the middle of the abdomen, the club compound, formed of the two apical joints compressed and pyriform. ‘The anterior wings have one marginal and two submarginal cells, the latter receiving both the recurrent ner- vures, the first near the basal, the second near the apical angle of the cell. ‘The legs simple. Abdomen oblong, the sides parallel, rounded at the base and apex. It will be seen that the above characters, with the exception of the capitate antenna, are those of the genus Megachile ; but the exceptional character is so remarkable when possessed by a mem- ber of the great family Apid@, that I have thought it desirable to depart from the rigid observance of those Jaws which usually of some New Species of Hymenopterous Insects. 395 regulate the formation of genera. The insect, for the reception of which I have established the present genus, is perhaps strictly a species of Megachile, since in that genus we find an infinite variety in the form of some organs in the male sex of different species ; we have one species found in this country, Megachile Willughbiella, of which Mr. Kirby observes, “ This sex (male) of our insect exhibits a peculiarity which none of those that are related to it in the form of the anterior tarsus possess ; the last joint of its antenne is larger than any of the rest, which gives them some resemblance to those of a Papilio.” The antennze thus described are, however, exactly like those of the majority of the males of Megachile, with the exception of the apical joint, which is compressed, and, when viewed laterally, presents the club-shaped form alluded to. In the insect here described the antennee are extremely slender and elongate, as in the genus Eucera, with the two apical joints forming a knob, or club, as in the beautiful Lepidopterous genus Argynnis. Thaumatosoma Duboulau. (Pl. XXI. fig. 1.) Male.—Length 5 lines. Black, the head and thorax opake, very finely and closely punctured; the face with a thin clothing of long silvery pu- bescence, that on the clypeus is more dense, shorter, and has a yel- lowish tinge ; the antenne ferruginous, with the apical knob or club black. The sides of the thorax with a thin cinereous pubes- cence ; the wings subhyaline, their nervures black; the tegule rufo-testaceous behind. Abdoinen shining and closely punctured ; the posterior margins of the segments with a narrow fringe of white pubescence ; the fourth segment clothed with fulvous; the fifth and sixth finely rugose, the latter slightly but widely emarginate ; the seventh segment concealed beneath the sixth, its margin armed on each side with a short acute tooth, and also having two longer blunt marginal spines which are equidistant from each other and from the lateral spines; the basal segment produced beneath into a blunt projecting node. The specimen described is in bad condition; judging from the ragged state of the wings, and the rubbed thorax and abdomen, it must have been long disclosed at the time of capture ; the white abdominal bands are nearly obliterated. I have named it, as a mark of compliment and encouragement to its captor, F, Du Boulay, Esq. Hab. West Australia. 396 Mr. F. Swith’s Descriptions Supplementary Paper. [Read 7th August, 1865. ] In addition to the figure and details of Thaumatosoma Duboulan, I have added to the Plate some remarkable forms of antennz of other species of Aculeate Hymenoptera, and herewith append short descriptions of the insects themselves. There are two or three known species of bees, the males of which have the apical joint of the antenne compressed, so that when viewed sideways, as Mr. Kirby remarks, “ it gives them somewhat the appearance of those of a Papilio;” such is the the antenna of Nomia Kirbi, as will be seen by the figure, but this, when viewed from above, appears to be of the ordinary form ; in the case of Thaumatosoma it is quite different, and the imitation of the antenna of a Papilio is complete; all the joints of the flagellum are attenuated and thread-like, except the two apical, which are enlarged, and swollen into a knob. Fam. MUTILLIDZE. Genus PsamMoTHERMA, Latr. Psammotherma flabellata. (PI. XXI. fig. 6.) Male.—Length 5 lines. Black ; strongly punctured ; the prothorax and tegule ferru- ginous; the antennz bipectinate ; the wings brown ; the posterior margin of the first and second segments of the abdomen narrowly edged with white pubescence, the third segment clothed with similar pubescence. The female has the pro- and meso-thorax entirely red. This species of Mutilla is from Senegal. Fam. POMPILID &, Leach. Genus Crenocrerus, Dahlb. Ctenocerus ramosus. (PI. XXI. fig. 4.) Male.—Length 3? of an inch. Black, the mandibles and labrum ferruginous; the antennz ferruginous, with the scape black and furnished beneath with a long dense floccus of black hair; the wings yellow and subhya- line; the apex of the wings with a dark brown border; the neuration pale ferruginous; the anterior tibiz and tarsi ob- scurely ferruginous; the head very convex in front; the thorax ot some New Species of Hymenopterous Insects. 397 elongate, longer than the abdomen, and also wider; the meta- thorax oblong and covered with a dense black pubescence; the abdomen covered with a sericeous reflexion, The female closely resembles the male, and is similarly coloured; the antenne are simple, dusky above, ferruginous beneath, two or three of the apical joints being entirely so; the abdomen is very smooth and shining and as long as the head and thorax. Length ,9, of an inch, This species was taken by Dr. Kannemeyer, at Burgerdorp, a Dutch settlement in South Africa. The only character that separates this insect from many species of Pompilide is the pectination of the antennz of the male; it is however, perhaps, desirable to retain Dahlbom’s genus for the reception of such species as have similar antenne ; the type is the Ctenocerus Klugii, Dahlb., subsequently described by Lucas under the name Clavelia pompiliformis, Ann. Ent. Soc. Fr. 1852. Fam. ANDRENID&, Leach. Genus Lamprocotieres, Smith. Lamprocolletes cladocerus, Smith. (Pl. XXI. fig. 3.) See Trans. Ent. Soc. ser. 3, i. 57. Black; the face and cheeks clothed with hoary pubescence, the mandibles ferruginous at their apex ; the joints of the antenne bipectinate, the pectinations irregularly toothed ; thorax shining, finely punctured, thinly clothed with hoary pubescence; the wings hyaline and iridescent; the claw-joint of the tarsi ferru- ginous, the calcaria pale testaceous; abdomen shining, mar- gins of the segments depressed ; finely punctured, and with a thinly scattered hoary pubescence. Male.—Length 4 lines. Taken near Sydney, Australia. This remarkable bee is still unique in the British Museum. The beautiful ramose antennz of the male present perhaps the most remarkable example of those organs known in the entire tribe of the Aculeata ; such an extraordinary departure from the normal form of antenna could scarcely have been looked for in the Apide, and if met with at all, might with much greater proba- bility have been expected to occur amongst the Z'enthredinide. 398 Mr. F. Sinith’s Descriptions Genus Noma, Latr. Nomia Kirbii, Westw. MS. (PI. XXI. fig. 5.) Male.—Length 7 lines. Black ; the head narrower than the thorax, the face and pos- terior margin of the vertex with a thick sooty-black pubescence ; the antenne a little shorter than the thorax, the apical joint com- pressed; the thorax clothed with short sooty pubescence ; the wings dark brown; the anterior tibiz and tarsi fringed behind with sooty pubescence; the intermediate femora incrassate and compressed beneath into a semidentate process; the posterior tibia also much swollen, forming a subtriangular mass which has a tooth at its inferior angle; abdomen ovate and shining, being thinly covered with sooty pubescence. This species is from Brazil; it formed part of the Collection of the Rev. W. Kirby, and is now in the British Museum. Fam. APIDE. Genus Tretratonia, Spin. Tetralonta mirabilis, (Pl. XXI. fig. 2.) Male.—Length 3 an inch. Head and thorax black; the clypeus, Jabrum and mandibles yellow, the base of the former black and the apex of the latter fer- ruginous; the face, cheeks and hinder margin of the vertex thickly clothed with long pale fulvous hair; the antennze elongate, ex- tending to the middle of the abdomen; the scape, first and base of the second joint of the flagellum black, the third to the eighth joints, which are cylindric and of about equal length, ferruginous and of the usual form, the three following attenuated to the thin- ness of a hair, the apical joint being black, flattened and pear- shaped ; the thorax clothed above with fulvous pubescence, much paler beneath; the tegule, base of the nervures of the wings and the legs ferruginous; the wings subhyaline, the nervures fusco- ferruginous, the costal nervure blackish ; abdomen reddish-brown, the basal margins of the segments with broad fascize of fine short pale downy pubescence. The species is from Rio. Notwithstanding the remarkable form of the antenne of this insect, I leave it for the present in the genus Yetralonia; should other species occur with similar antennal peculiarities, they may be conveniently separated from Tetralonia, and constitute a new genus. of some New Species of Hymenopterous Insects. 399 Genus CuHaticopoma. Chalicodoma ceelocera, Smith. (Pl. XXI. fig. 7.) This species was described in the Catalogue of Apide, pub- lished by the Trustees of the British Museum; it was there in- cluded in the genus Megachile; subsequently Herr Gueinzius forwarded from Port Natal both sexes of the insect and the nest, which proved it to belong to the genus Chalicodoma, which con- structs mud nests on walls, &e. The sexes are similarly coloured, black and pubescent, with the abdomen bright fulvous-red, except the basal segment, which is black ; the wings are dark brown; in the male sex, the antenne are clavate and hollowed out beneath, and the anterior tarsi are expanded as in the males of Megachile. Length A of an inch. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXI. (All the figures are considerably magnified.) Fig. 1. Thaumatosoma Duboulaii, @; 1a, antenna. 2. Tetralonia mirabilis, g, antenna. 3. Lamprocolletes cladoverus, $; 3a, antenna; 3b, underside of antenna. 4. Ctenocerus ramosus, g, antenna ; 4a, underside of ditto. 5. Nomia Kirbii, @, antenna. 6. Psammotherma flabellata, antenna ; 6a, underside of a few joints of ditto. 7. Chalicodoma celocera, g, antenna; 7a, underside of ditto. () °40)Rer) XIX. Descriptions of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. By the Rev. Hamuet Crark, M.A., F.LS. {Read Ist May and 5th June, 1865. ] In laying before the Society a paper containing descriptions of certain new species of Phytophaga from Western Australia, I desire to offer a few remarks gn Entomological papers generally —their object, their legitimate scope, and their value. I will begin with what is a self-evident proposition ; that papers, like those which are honoured by a place in our Transactions, may be of the greatest importance to the cause of science; or they may be to its very serious injury—and this latter even when the writers have a real aptitude for and are thoroughly conscien- tious in their self-imposed studies. Papers are really valuable when—and indeed only to the degree to which—the information which they supply (its accuracy, its completeness) is sufficient to outweigh the labour that will be required on the part of future students in order to obtain access to them, and to master their contents; for it is well to remember that the author of the most perfect paper in the world is not only by writing it undertaking work himself, but he is most certainly making future work for others; the more he can save the time of others the more useful is his work—the more his paper taxes the time of others the less profitable is his work : this simple fact, if we admit it, at once suggests one aspect which gives in part the measurement of the value of any paper, as an addition to Ento- mological literature: its limit and scope should be clear and well defined, and within that limit it should be, as far as its subject will permit, exhaustive: it may comprehend a genus, or a group of genera; or it may comprehend a country or a continent: but it should comprehend something, and be limited to something, and within that range it should aim at being as perfect as time and material will allow. I will grant that there is a great charm in being able to wander at will over a vast domain; to describe from one continent a beautiful species ; from another continent to seek to fix a striking form as a new genus; to travel from one group to another—from the old world right across to the new—and all within the limits of a few pages! But what infinite labour is all 402 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions this causing to future students! or rather, I would say, how great is the risk that some future student, either by accident or indo- lence, may ignore part of the contents of such a paper altogether. The husbandman who marks out a small portion of unreclaimed land, and then brings the whole of that portion under cultivation, is doing far better work than he who fearlessly charges at the whole sweep of country up to the very horizon; the Jabour of the former will bear fruit long after the very name of the latter has been forgotten. And it is worthy of notice, that that which most permanently benefits science is that which also contributes most renown to the writer himself. He who has thoroughly mastered one single point will certainly stand out among us more clearly than he who has ranged over a hundred points and mastered none; to do little, and make that little available for others, is far better than to do much and to add infinitely to the labours of others. It is not the happy possessor of a collection—crowded though it may be in types, or most ample in material—whose name will be most esteemed by our successors; for collections pass away from hand to hand, and leave behind them hardly the name of him to whom they have been the care of years: it is not necessarily even the irrepressible writer, who has added a hundred papers to our lite- rature; it is indeed certain that such a man has been indus- trious, but it does not by any means follow that that industry has been wisely applied. He rather will be spoken of as ex- cellent, who—it may be with small opportunities —it may be with less brilliant talent than that of many others—has in his studies kept always before him a sense of the vastness of the range of Natural Science; a desire to benefit others, rather than to amuse himself; and hence a resolution to touch nothing that he cannot complete. I offer these remarks as a preface to a very unpretending paper, with no sort of intention of criticizing any papers pub- lished by the Society, except my own; but because 1 desire that our literary efforts, which will hereafter give the character to ourselves, may not suffer when compared with those of others ; and because I am conscious myself of an absolute proneness to the failing to which I refer—a tendency to discursiveness in Entomo- Jogical work. The following descriptions of insects represent part of a very interesting little collection of West Australian Phytophaga, which has been placed in my hands by Mr. Du Boulay. Mr. Du Boulay’s of New Phytophaga from Western Wiicien ten 403 method of entomologizing has been this: he rides some score miles every day through the bush; he provides himself with a strong canvas bag, which generally in his gallops is drag- ging behind him—very much I imagine after the manner of a dredging-net at a yacht’s stern in a ten-knots’ breeze. At oppor- tune moments during the day this bag is examined ; its apex is found crammed with insect life; three or four of the largest and most striking specimens are selected; the rest are tossed away, and the gallop resumed. I have reason to know that for the future our friend, who is really as keen an Entomologist and as true a lover of nature as any one I know, will take better care of the residuum of the contents of his sweeping-net. He excused himself to me for his natural-selection tendencies by stating that he believed that he was the only one in Australia or Europe who was sufficiently advanced to care for such things. Mr. Du Boulay, on his return to West Australia, will be envied by many of us as having it within his power to explore an almost unknown and most interesting Entomological Fauna. List of new Species hereinafter described. Curysometip®. Paro)sis, seventeen species; see tabular analysis below. Chalcolampra undulatipennis. laticollis. Australica a@neonitens. Chalcomela subpunctata. Eumotripa. Geloptera Duboulan. nodosa. Thaumxstomerus viridis. Edusa aureoviridis. setosa. hispidula. nigro-@ned. Ocnus viridis. Fam. CHRYSOMELIDE. Genus Paropsis, Oliv. The species of Paropsis described in this paper may be tabu- lated as follows :— [1.] Corpore ovato, depresso. (1) P. mediovittata. (2) P. apicata. 404 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions [II.] Corpore brevi, subrotundato, satis gibboso. [A.] Elytris levibus. 1, Elytris striato-punctatis. (a) Elytris rufo-fulvis, vel testaceis. (3) P. ameena. (4) P. captiosa. e (5) P. maculicollis. (b) Elytris maculatis. (6) P. purpureo-aurea. (7) P. tessellata. (8) P. nigroconspersa. (9) P. sanguineotincta. (10) P. transversomaculata. (11) P. intertincta. (c) Elytris nigris. (12) P. nigritula. 2. Elytris confuse punctatis. (13) P. nigropicta. [B.] Elytris rugosis, vel subtuberculatis. (a) Elytris concoloribus (punctis ipsis forsitan tinctis). (14) P. incurva. (15) P. perparvula, (b) Elytris maculatis, vel aliter tinctis. (16) P. nervosa. (17) P. verrucipennis. 1. Paropsis mediovittata. Elongato-ovalis, depressa, striato-punctata, rufo-flava, sutura laté fulvo-rufa : caput crebre punctatum, vel rufo-flavum vel testaceum ; thorax transversus, basi subsinuata, lateribus rotundatis, versus apicem contractis, marginatis, angulis an- ticis haud prominentibus; crebré sed minuté punctatus, ad Jatera puncta profundiora; scutellum subelongatum, lateribus subrotundatis, impunctatum, nitidum ; elytra apice attenuata, depressa, punctato-striata, punctis minutis aqua- libus ordinatis, interstitia subtiliter punctata; rufo-flava, vitta media rufo-fulva apud suturam utrinque strias duas amplectens, apex ipse quoque rufo-fulvus; corpus subtus, pedes et antenne flavo-testacel. Long. corp. lin. 4—2# ; lat. lin. 23—2. P. mediovittata belongs to that sub-section of this large genus, which includes those species that have elongated and flattened of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 405 bodies ; it is closely allied in form to P. scaphoides, Baly (ined.), which also I have received from Western Australia. In Mr. Baly’s Collection as well as in my own. 2. Paropsis apicata. E minutis, depressa, ovalis, punctato-striata, flava, in exemplo desiceato ad scutellum et apicem sanguineo-notata: caput crebré punctatum, rufo-flavum, labro ad medium fusco-notato; thorax vix triplo longitudinem latitudine superans, margine antico angulato-emarginato, postico sinuato, transverso, angulis anticis breviter rotundatis ; confertim et inaequaliter punctatus, punctis versus latera majoribus; flavus, vel rufo-flavus, margine antico tenuiter rufo-fusco, et dorso medio obscure rufo; scutedlum triangulare, impunctatum, rufo-flavum; elytra lata, depressa, apice rotundata, striato- punctata, punctis crebris minutis, interstitiis minute punc- tatis et versus apicem elevatis ; margines utrinque minuté et confusé punctati; quoad colorem (in exemplo unico desiccato) flava, apice late et regione scutellari sanguineis, color autem flavus incertus et adumbratus est, interdum fusco ambigue no- tatus; corpus subtus flavum, abdomine fuscato; pedes flavi, genubus et tarsis rufo-flavis: antenne rufo-fusce, apice sub- incrassate. Long. corp. lin. 2; lat. lin. 12: A single example from which the above description is taken suggests, by its appearance, that the living insect may be quite different in colour, and probably of singular beauty ; it will be recognised from all species of a similar size by the well-pronounced coloration of the apex and its somewhat less distinct triangular post-scutellary marking. 3. Paropsis ameena. Lata, circularis, depressa, striato-punctata, pallide flava, san- guineo-colorata: caput antice sinuato-transversé foveolatum, crebré punctatum, flavum, labro rufo-flavo, medio fusco-tincto; thorax penitus longitudinem latitudine triplo superans, an- gulis anticis prominulis et obtusis, posticis rotundatis, latera rotundata et tenué marginata, margine anteriori valdé ex- cavato et marginato; valde punctatus, crebrius ad latera, utringue ad latera laté impressus, rufo-flavus, flavo- notatus, notis tribus longitudinalibus, apud apicem medium 406 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions connexis, media recta, lateralibus valde sinuatis; margines etiam obscure flavi; scutedlum elongato-triangulare, lave, impunctatum, rufo-flavum, medio flavo; elytra ampliata, satis depressa, apice rotundata, striato-punctata, punctis crebris minutis et ordinatis, interstitia subtilissime punctata et rugosa, margines ampliati et confuse et fortiter punctati; flavo-sanguineo omnino tincta, marginibus exceptis flavis ; corpus sublus et pedes pallide flavi; antenne fusce, articulis 1—4 flavis. Long. corp. lin. 33; lat. lin. 3. It is possible that the sanguineous coloration of the elytra may be in some examples absent. The species may be distinguished by its almost circular and depressed form, and the regular even and minute punctuation of its elytra. Champion Bay. 4, Paropsis capliosa. Lata, subcircularis, post medium paulum ampliata, vix depressa, humeris utrinque subtuberculatis, striato-punctata, pallide flava: caput ad labrum transversé et subcirculariter foveo- latum, crebré punctatum, pallide testaceum, labro ad medium nigro-tineto, et macula utrinque nigra minut& apud basin ; thorax longitudinem mediam latitudine plus duplo superans, angulis anticis obtusis distinctis, lateribus marginatis et rotundatis, angulis posticis rotundatis ; indistincte sed ad latera crebrius et fortius punctatus; sculel/um elongato- triangulare, impunctatum, leve; elytra lata, post medium ampliata, apice breviter rotundata; juxta humeros utrinque oblique visos tuberculum breve apparet; striato-punc- tata, punctis ordinatis confertis et minutis, interstitia vix lzevia sed minutissime punctata vel rugosa, (strie ad Jatera et ad apicem paulum profunde videntur, haud ut in P. amcend obsolete et leves), margines ampliati et for- titer punctati; corpus sublus et pedes flavi; antenne fusce, articulis basalibus rufo-testaceis, Long. corp. lin, 33 ; lat. lin. 3. P. captiosa is nearly allied to P. ameena (ante, p. 405), both in general form, size and punctate striation of the elytra; after a careful examination I am persuaded that it represents a separate and a new species: when viewed laterally it is decidedly less depressed, more globose; when viewed obliquely, a tubercular elevation near the shoulders stands out distinctly, and makes the of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 407 shoulders more prominent than in P. amena. The outline also, from above, is somewhat different; in P. amcna it is broadly subcircular, in P. captiosa it is somewhat dilated behind the middle. Champion Bay. 5. Paropsis maculicollis. Rotundato-ovalis, punctato-striata, flava vel flavo-testacea: caput fovea lineari ad apicem transvers& subsinuata, crebré punctatum, flavum, basi et maculis duabus juxta basin (ali- quando confluentibus et basi connexis), etiamque interdum lined apicali, nigris; thorax latitudine duplo longitudinem superans, angulis posticis rotundatis, anticis haud prominulis, margine apicali valde emarginato et sinuato; punctatus (punctis crebris minutis et inaequalibus, latera versus magnis et confertis), flavus, maculis quibusdam in forma literae W ordinatis (interdum conjunctis, interdum insulatis, et in nu- mero circa decem); sculellum subtriangulare, minutissime punctatum, nigro-fuscum ; e/ytra brevia, lata, striato-punc- tata, flava vel fusco-flava, punctis minutis raris nigris ordinatis sed intervallis inzequalibus dispositis, interstitia etiam evi- denter punctata; corpus sublus rufo-testaceum ; pedes testacel, genubus fuscis ; antenne flave, apicibus fusco-adumbratis. Long. corp. lin. 23; lat. lin. 2. A well-defined little species, notable by its thoracic maculations, and the minute black and sparingly-distributed punctures of its elytra. 6. Paropsis purpureo-aurea. Rotundato-ovalis, satis depressa, punctato-striata; dum viva, purpureo-aurea, mortua et desiccata, flavo-testacea, fusco- maculata: caput linea anticé sinuato-transversa, punctatum, flavum ; thorax transversus, latitudine haud elytra sed longi- tudinem ipsius plus duplo superans, lateribus rotundatis, angulis posticis rotundatis, anticis haud prominulis, crebre punctatus, punctis in disco minutis inaequalibus, ad latera confertis et majoribus; quoad colorem flavus, disco medio confuse fusco-ornato ; scutellum subcordiforme, impuncta- tum; elytra satis lata, marginibus ampliatis, striato-punctata, punctis minutis confertis et equaliter ordinatis, interstitia etiam punctis crebris ornata ; quoad colorem obscuré notata, flavo-testacea, utrinque circulo magno scutellari, alteroque VOL. II. THIRD SERIES, PART V.—SEPT. 1865. GG 408 Rey. H. Clark’s Descriptions apicali subelongato maximo, macula etiam laterali ante- media elongaté; corpus subtus flavum; pedes et antenne pallide flavi. Long. corp. lin. 33; lat. lin. 22. Z Mr. Du Boulay says that the example from which this deserip- tion is taken was, when alive, inconceivably brilliant and lovely ; it was one single gem of bright metallic purple and burnished gold, and so attractive that he carried it for some days in his handkerchief in the bush; at last it died, he looked for it but could not find it, and only saw, to his utter bewilderment, in its place an obscure-looking flavous insect, as it presents itself to me. According to his description (which accords exactly with the present markings), the elytra are golden, with a broad well- formed ring of brilliant purple (extending over half the breadth of the elytra) on either side near the scutellum, and another oblong ring which occupies the whole apical part of the elytra ; between the two rings, near the side, is a third longitudinal purple marking; the margins of the elytra are broadly and palely golden; the thorax is golden, with a magnificent centre-piece of purple. I have had much pleasure in receiving a kind offer from Mr. Du Boulay, that on his return to his Australian home he will prepare coloured drawings of species of this genus when in a living state, and forward them to me, together with the specimens from which the drawings were made. In this way, and it appears to me in this way only, can we make our descriptions of this genus of value to Australian Entomologists, Champion Bay. 7. Paropsis tessellata. Ovata, satis rotundata, vix depressa, punctato-striata; exempli mortui et desiccati corpus subtus, pedes, et antenne rufo- flavi, elytra pallide testacea, fusco-maculata: caput antice linea obsoleta juxta epistoma curvata, leviter punctatum, rufo-flavum ; thorax longitudine latitudinem vix triplo su- perans, lateribus rotundatis et satis ampliatis, margine antico lato valdé emarginato, angulis anticis subprominulis, sparsim punctulatus, rufo-flavus, maculis utrinque in medium (vel macula transversé adumbrata indeterminata) fuscis; scu- tellum triangulare, lave (rarissime punctatum), flavo-fuscum ; elytra brevia, longitudine amplitudinem superantia, punctato- striata, punctis aqualibus sed ineequaliter distributis, pallidé fusca, maculis 20—80 quadratis in singulo elytro pallidé of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 409 testaceis; corpus subtus pallidé flavum ; pedes flavi, genubus et femoribus supra fusco-adumbratis ; antenne rufo-flave. Long. corp. lin. 333 lat. lin. 23. P. tessellata is conspicuous among other species by the peculiar tessellated pattern of its elytra; frequently the closely arranged order of punctures is interrupted, in each interruption appears a rectangular flavous marking, in the centre of which is a single puncture ; the ordinary punctures are black on a fuscous ground, the isolated punctures are fulvous on a flavous ground. I have received two examples of this species from Mr. Du Boulay, one of which is in Mr. Baly’s cabinet, the other in my own. 8. Paropsis nigroconspersa. Late ovata, subrotundata, vix depressa, rufo-testacea, nigro- maculata et conspersa: caput sparsim punctatum ; thorax transversus, margine posteriori subrotundato in medio am- pliato, lateribus paulum rotundatis et caput versus com- pressis, angulis anticis obtusis, posticis modice rotundatis ; sparsim punctatus, lateribus punctis crebrius ornatis ; scutel- dum triangulare, impunctatum, nitidum; elytra satis brevia et rotundata, striato-punctata, punctis profundis modicis ordinatis, versus Jatera media autem confusis, plerumque nigris; macule etiam nigre post-mediz longitudinales suturales elytra ornant; macula inter strias 1 et 2 post scutellum, elongata; inter strias 3 et 4 major, interstitium totum ad medium elytri occupans ; inter strias 4 et 5 series macularum minorum, et inde ad latera minores inordinate plus minus distribute ; apicem versus majores et plus con- fertee, ad humeros quoque (ad strias 7 et 8) macula major insulata; corpus subtus, pedes et antenne rufo-flavi. Long. corp. lin. 3—2}; lat. lin. 2. Two specimens are before me, which differ but slightly the one from the other. The species may be recognized among its punctate-striate congeners by the double lines of elongate mark- ings near the suture, and the lateral more irregular and insular markings. I received both specimens, ¢ and 2, from Mr. Du Boulay, from Champion Bay. 9. Paropsis sanguineotincta. E minoribus, ovalis, subparallela, ad apicem attenuata, striato- punctata, rufo-testacea, nigro-vittata, medio sanguineo-tincta : GG2 410 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions caput supra labrum transversé arcuate foveolatum, crebré punctatum, ad basin nigro-marginatum ; thorax transversus, lateribus rotundatis juxta angulos anticos vix rotundatos subcompressis, angulis posticis obtusis; crebré et minuté punctatus, punctis ad latera fortioribus ; scutellum sub- cordiforme, impunctatum, rufo-testaceum; elytra satis par- allela, thorace paulum latiora, apicem versus attenuatiora, utrinque striis 10 punctorum ornata, punctis confertis et ordinatis, interstitia minutissimé punctata; in elytro singulo sutura et vittee quatuor interrupte nigrz; prima scutel- laris, brevis, inter strias 2 et 3; secunda inter strias 4 et 5, apicem attingens, sed in medium interrupta; tertia brevis, juxta apicem apud striam 7; quarta marginalis, sed longo intervallo a margine separata, apud striam 9, et humeros et apicem penitus attingens, sed in medio interrupta; strie 2, 3 et 4 juxta apicem sese attingunt; in medio elytrorum utrinque macula magna roseo- vel sanguineo-tincta ; pedes, corpus subtus et antenne rufo-flavi. Long. corp. lin. 23; lat. lin. 13. A lovely little species, marked with four interrupted but bold vittze of black, and having in the middle of each elytron an in- determinate marking of bright rufous. Champion Bay. 10. Paropsis transversomaculata. E minoribus, depressa, late ovalis, marginata, striato-punctata, flava, maculis nigris ornata: caput ineequaliter punctatum, flavum, labro rufo-tincto, basi maculis duabus magnis nigro- rufis ornata; thorax latitudine plus duplo longitudinem excellens, angulis posticis et anticis obtusis, emargina- tione anterior! profunddé, haud circulari sed utrinque ob- tusé angulata; crebré confusé et inzqualiter punctatus, punctis ad latera confertis et majoribus, flavus, macula utrinque insulata magna dilut& rufo-fuscé, marginibusque _ tenuiter rufo-coloratis ; scutellum elongato-triangulare, im- punctatum, rufo-fuscum; elytra lata, ovata, post medium Jatiora, apice rotundata, depressa, late marginata, striato- punctata, punctis equalibus ordinatis nigris, interstitiis etiam subtiliter punctatis ; margo latus, planus, punctis sparsis con- fusis ad latera ornatus ; elytra flava, macularum serie lunata transversa mediand, alteraque apicali; mediana e maculis tribus penitus confluentibus vix striam lateralem attingentibus constat, series postica ad striam 9 extendit; macula utrin- ee of New Phytophaya from Western Australia. 41 que exterior major et latior, et apud humeros quoque ma- cula insulata nigra; corpus subtus nigrum ; pedes et antenne rufo-flavi. Long. corp. lin. 24; lat. lin. 14. This species may be recognized by its depressed and broadly ovate form, the markings on its head and thorax, and the two sub- circular transverse rows of fuscous markings on the elytra. A single example in my collection is from Champion Bay. 11. Paropsis intertincta. Late ovalis, subdepressa, punctato-striata, rufo-flava, maculis nigris ornata: caput minuté punctatum, labro ad medium nigro-notato, basi nigrum; thoraa transversus, latitudine longitudinis duplum aquante, angulis anticis rotundatis, posticis obtusis; crebré et minuté punctatus, punctis apud latera majoribus et confertis; scutel/um triangulare, impunc- tatum, fuscum ; elytra rotundata, subdepressa, post medium latiora, punctato-striata, punctis minutis confertis, interstitiis minuté punctatis; rufo-flava, maculis nigris ornata, serie subcirculari circa scutellum, alterdque post medium circa apicem (interdum penitus obliterata), macula etiam longi- tudinali Jaterali ante medium: antenne, corpus subtus, et pedes rufo-flavi. Long. corp. lin, 24; lat. lin. 13. P. intertincta is allied to P. transversomaculata, but abundantly distinct ; the punctures of the elytra are much more minute, and the maculation of the elytra is entirely different. In the species before us the medial subtransverse row of maculations is inflected towards the apex; in P. transversomaculata it is inflected towards the base. Champion Bay. 12. Paropsis ngritula. E minimis, depressa, late ovalis, striato-punctata, rufo-flava, elytris nigris: caput sparsim punctatum, flavum, labro ad medium fuscato ; thorax transversus, latitudine longitudinem plus duplo superante, lateribus subrotundatis et marginatis, angulis anticis obtusis, posticis subrotundatis ; minuté punc- tatus, fortius ad latera, flavus, margine antico fuscato; scutellum subtriangulare, lve, nigrum ; elytra lata, depressa, striato-punctata, interstitiis subtilissime punctatis ; antenne 412 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions flavo-testaceze; pedes testacei; corpus subtus nigrum, ab- domine fuscato. Long. corp. lin. 14; lat. lin. 1. Notable by its minute size, its depressed form, and its black punctate-striate elytra. 13. Paropsis nigropicta. Rotundato-ovalis, subtiliter punctata, rufo-sanguinea, nigro- maculata: caput punctatum, rufum, labro et basi (oculos ad latera amplectenti) nigris; thorax transversus, valde declivis, basi superne visi transversa, lateribus subrotundatis, angulis vix acutis, margine anteriori valde sinuato-emarginato ; punctatus, punctis ineequalibus minutis crebris, rufo- sanguineus, macula utrinque nigra circulari insulata magna ornatus; scutellum magnum, triangulare, lave, nigrum ; elytra rotundata, brevia, pone medium sub-ampliata, punctata, punctis confertis inzequalibus vix ordine dispositis, rufo- sanguinea nigro-maculata, maculis quatuor, 1* ante-laterali subtriangulari vel subcirculari plerumque insulata, 24 scu- tellari circulari magna margines basalem et suturalem attingenti et maculam rufam intra sese amplectenti, 3* post- media transvers& ineequali interdum in maculis duabus divisa, 4% apicali ad suturam etiamque ad marginem hemi- elytrorum extendenti; antenne rufe; corpus subtus nigrum, abdomine rufo-marginato; pedes rufi, femoribus nigro-ornatis. Long. corp. lin. 21; lat. lin. 13. The four examples before me vary but little from each other either in size or degree of coloration; the insect is quite distinct from other known species of the group. 14, Paropsis incurva. Late ovalis, globosa, elytris transversé visis subgibbosis, fusco-rufa: caput antice utrinque transversé foveolatum, crebreé et leviter punctatum; thorax longitudinem latitudine triplo superans, angulis anticis breviter rotundatis, posticis late rotundatis, punctatus, punctis sat minatis et crebris, apud latera fortioribus; scutellum triangulare, levissime punctatum ; elytra lata, globosa, marginibus paulum ampli- atis, striato-punctata, punctis brevibus inzequalibus, inzequa- liter subordinatis, interdum etiam confusis interdum obso- letis, ad margines paulum majoribus et rarius distributis, of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 413 elytra quoque leviter et crebré verrucosa et transversim rugosa, rugis omni parte dispartitis ; corpus subtus rufo-ferru- gineum, metasterno medio fusco-adumbrato; pedes et antenne rufo-flavi. r . 1-s . Long.*corp. lin. 33; lat. lin. 3. This species may be recognized from other species with ver- rucose elytra, by the gibbous form of the medial elytra when seen sideways, and by the comparatively undeveloped and generally distributed rugosities on the surface of the elytra. Champion Bay. 15. Paropsis perparvula. Late ovalis, subcircularis, convexa, subtuberculata, confusé punctata, rubiginosa: caput crebré punctatum, spatio basali brevi leevi ; thoraz transversus, Jatitudine longitudinem triplo superans, crebré et satis fortiter punctatus, angulis anticis distinctis, posticis rotundatis, lateribus etiam rotundatis ; scutellum late triangulare, leave, rufo-flavum, marginibus rufo-fuscis ; elytra satis convexa, rotundata, confuse et cre- bré punctata, punctis versus suturam et apicem seriebus or- dinatis ; tubercula etiam rarius apparent, inaequalia ple- rumque insulata juxta suturam apicalem penitus ordinata ; corpus subtus et antenne flavo-fusce ; pedes flavo-rufi. Long. corp. lin. 24; lat. lin. 2. P. perparvula, though belonging to the very difficult and ex- tensive sub-group of tuberculated species, is, I believe, easily to be recognized—at all events it abundantly differs from all Western Australian species with which I am acquainted. I have several species in my Collection, received for the most part from M. Damel, from the North and North-West districts: the species before us may be recognized easily among them all by its small size, the close irregular punctuation of the elytra, which becomes near the apical suture arranged in striz, and by the absence of any dark fuscous spots on the elytra. Champion Bay. 16. Paropsis nervosa. Late ovalis, vix gibbosa, vibicibus transversis apud elytra or- nata, punctata, rufo-castanea: caput apud labrum fovea lineari subtransversA ornatum, inequaliter rugosum, plaga circulari utrinque media subdepressa nigra, labro etiam ad 414 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions medium nigro; thorax longitudinem latitudine triplo supe- rans, angulis anticis rotundato-obtusis et prominulis, posticis rotundatis, lateribus rotundatis et tenuiter marginatis, margine anteriore lat@ emarginato; ad medium carina obsoleta longi- tudinalis; punctatus et vermiculariter subrugosus, macula utrinque magna nigr& penitus quadrat& inter medium et marginem, et in his maculis rugis fortioribus et distinctis ; scutellum triangulare, punctatum ; elytra satis gibbosa, post medium paulum ampliata, marginibus extensis, apice vix rotundato sed paululum producto; fortiter et crebré punc- tata, punctis nigro-fuscis, apud humeros utrinque tuberculo unico paulum elevata, ad latera et ad medium vibicibus interruptis 2 vel 3 ornata, etiamque tuberculis vix crebris apud apicem sed juxta suturam post-mediam crebrioribus et seriebus 2 ordinatis; quoad colorem rufo-castanea, ma- culé fuscA magn indeterminaté ad scutellum, altera in tuberculum humerale, iterumque vitté subobsoleta rufo- fusca a humeris ad apicem continuata; corporis subtus pro- thorax flavus, metathorax rufo-flavus nigro-tinctus, abdo- men crebré punctatum, rufum; antenne rufo-flavee; pedes flavo-testacel. Long. corp. lin. 2¢; lat. lin. 24. P. nervosa may be distinguished by its strongly punctate elytra, which are marked by a single medial transverse raised band, and one or two others, smaller and more interrupted, nearer the apex ; the almost quadrate (not circular) markings of the thorax, and the rufo-flavous markings on the elytra, amply distinguish it from allied species. 17. Paropsis verrucipennis. Late ovalis, gibbosa, verrucis et quasi vibicibus transversis ornata, rufo-castanea, nigro-maculata: caput crebré puncta- tum, rufo-castaneum, labro ad medium nigro-notato; thorax triplo longitudinem latitudine superans, angulis posticis ro- tundatis, anticis obtusis, lateribus rotundatis; crebré punc- tatus, punctis confusis ineequalibus ad latera magnis ; rufo-castaneus, utrinque ad latus macula circulari magna; scutellum subcordiforme, ad medium subdepressum, minute punctatum ; e/ytra gibbosa, infra scutellum rotundato-elevata, marginibus post medium paulum ampliatis, apice rotundato ; verrucis inequalibus post medium seriebus ordinatis tecta, of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 415 ad latera notis transversis elevatis ineequalibus 1 vel 2 vel 3 ornata; pedes rufo-flavi; corpus subtus et antenné rufo-fusce. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 23. The group of species of this genus that has the elytra of a rufo- ferruginous colour and adorned with tubercular elevations, either in the form of isolated warts or transverse weals, is very nume- rous, and the species in some instances are both closely allied and subject to variation of sculpture. The species before us however presents no difficulty of definition; it is in form very gibbous; behind the scutellum the whole of the elytra, when viewed laterally, is raised into a hump-like elevation; their surface is covered with warty elevations, arranged near the apex in irregular striz, and near the sides interrupted by and changed into transverse elevated ridges, more or less clearly defined ; the broad circular lateral markings of the thorax also render this species conspicuous among its congeners. Genus CuHatcotampra, Blanch. 1. Chalcolampra undulatipennis. Oblongo-ovalis, subparallela, eneo-metallescens, elytris punctis etiamque tuberculis obsoletis ornatis: caput inter oculos transversé subdepressum, ad margines oculorum crebré et fortiter punctatum, juxta labrum utrinque oblique et brevi- ter foveolatum (fovezee margine impunctato), versus basin leviter et sparsim punctatum; thorax magnus, transversus, latitudine elytra equans, declivis, lateribus leviter rotundatis, margine anteriori fortiter emarginato, basali transverso recto ; utrinque leviter apud margines depressus, et sparsim sed fortiter punctatus, apud discum rarissime punctis magnis sed crebré minutissimis ornatus ; scutellum transverso- triangulare, impunctatum, lve, nitidum; elytra parallela, versus apicem subattenuata, etiamque declivia, punctis raris satis magnis ordinatis, etiam quasi tuberculis subelevatis ornata, ordinibus quinque dispositis; corpus subtus rufo- zeneum, abdomen autem nigrum, segmento apicali in medio fortiter impresso ; pedes nigro-zeneo metallici, genubus tarsis- que rufo-metallescentibus ; antenne rufo-fusce. Long. corp. lin. 4; lat. lin. 24. Very nearly allied to Chalcolampra verrucosa, Clark (Journ. Entom. ii. 250), but broader, of a more decided green metallic 416 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions colour, and with the elevations on the elytra much less distinctly expressed. I have received a single specimen of this species from Swan River. 2. Chalcolampra laticollis. Oblongo-ovata, subparallela, eneo-nigra, striato-punctata : caput leviter et sparsim punctatum, punctis ad apicem et juxta oculos crebrius instructis, labro rufo-ferrugineo ; thorax latitudine longitudinem duplo superans et elytra zequans, lateribus ampliatis et rotundatis, sparsim punctatus, punctis apud latera majoribus et crebris ; scutellwm triangu- Jare, impunctatum ; elytra parallela, apice declivia, striato- punctata, punctis minutis confertis et plerumque ordinatis, striis ipsis versus medium obsoletis; corpus subtus rufo-fus- cum; pedes rufo-flavi ; antenne pallide rufee. — Long. corp. lin. 4; lat. lin, 2. This species resembles Australica irrorata, Baly ; the thorax has its sides more rounded in front; the head and thorax are much more punctate; and the stripe-like punctures of the elytra are more evenly arranged and less crowded. Champion Bay. Genus Austratica, Chevr. 1. Australica eneonitens. Elongato-ovalis, satis parallela, crebré punctata, therace fusco- zeneo vel viridi-zeneo, elytris viridi-zneis: caput fortiter et crebré punctatum, fusco-nigrum, labro rufo-flavo; thorax transversus, lateribus ampliato-rotundatis, punctatus, punctis satis crebris juxta latera confertis; scutellum subtriangulare, impunctatum, lave; elytra parallela, punctata, punctis crebris et satis magnis Juxta suturam seriebus 2 vel 3 inordinatis dispositis, alibi confusis; corpus swbtus eneo-nigrum ; pedes rufi, genubus fuscis; antenne rufee. Long. corp. lin. 24; lat. lin. 1. This pretty little species is quite distinct from its congeners, and may at once be recognized by its bright blue colour: it will by reason of its parallel form be placed near to 4. Water- houst, Baly, (Trans. Ent. Soc. 3rd ser. i, 620.) Champion -Bay. In Mr. Baly’s collection, and also in my own. of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 417 Genus Cuatcometa, Baly. 1. Chalcomela subpunctata. C. pilule (Clark, Journ. Entom. ii. 251) affinis ; fere rotundata, zeneo-nigra, subtiliter punctata: caput foved lineari minuta subtransversa alteraque longitudinali versus apicem, sub- tiliter et creberrimé punctatum, labro rufo-flavo; thorax ut in C. piluld sed crebrius subpunctatus; scutellum late triangulare, impunctatum, nitidum ; elytra rotundata, striato- punctata, punctis haud ut in C. piluld magnis et inzequalibus sed minutis confertis et ordinatis, interstitia subtiliter punc- tata etiamque subtilissimé rugosa; corpus subtus, pedes et antenne nigro-enel. Long. corp. lin. 24; lat. lin, 24. This species may readily be separated from C. pilula by its more regular stripe-like punctures on the elytra; the punctures are smaller and more closely arranged: it differs also in the minute thread-like fovea on the head. Champion Bay. Fam. EUMOLPID. Genus Getortera, Baly, Journ. Entom. i. 283. 1. Geloptera Duboulaii. Oblonga, convexa, parallela, punctata vel reticulata, plerumque metallico-violacea: caput in medio foveolatum, fortiter punc- tatum, violaceum; thorax transversus, lateribus antice constrictis et depressis, marginatis et dentibus obsoletis 3 vel 4 armatis, margine basali subsinuato et in medium marginato; confusé confertim et inzequaliter punctatus ; scutellum subcirculare, impunctatum, viride; elytra versus apicem striis 2 vel 3 utrinque brevibus ornata, interstitils elevatis, disco transversé et fortiter reticulato; metallico- violacea, marginibus tenuiter viridibus ; corpus subtus viride, abdomine fusco ; pedes rufo-metallici; antenne rufe. Long. corp. lin. 4; lat. lin. 23. This species, which I name in honour of its captor, is entirely different from the other two species of the genus, G, tuberculata and G, geniculata, both of which, found at Swan River, are com- mon in collections. In the collection of Mr. Baly, as well as in my own. 418 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions 2. Geloptera nodosa. Subelongata, obscure cuprea, confusé punctata, nodis ornata: caput labro nigro, punctatissimum, vel nigro-cupreum vel nigrum; thorax vix transversus, angulis anticis compressis, fortiter et rugosé punctatus, nodis 4 in medio instructus ; sculellum transversé subcirculare; elytra satis elongata, apice attenuata, fortiter et confertim punctata, obsolete tuberculata, tuberculis plerumque insulatis; corpus subtus nigro-fuscum, abdomine pube adpressa pallida obtecto; pedes rufo-fusci ; antenne nigro-fusce. Long. corp. lin. 3—24; lat. lin. 13}—14. In appearance this species approaches G. tuberculata, but is much smaller and more parallel: it is more elongate than G. geniculata. In the collection of Mr. Baly, and also in my own. Genus THAUMASTOMERUS. Genus novum ex Eumolpidis, late ovatum. Caput verticale, antice subproductum. Palpi articulo ultimo turgido, incras- sato, haud ut plerumque in genere Ldusd subelongato. Antenne filiformes, elongate, tenues. Thorax transversus, angulis anticis valde depressis et acutis, marginibus lateralibus subrotundatis, anteriori emarginato, posteriori sinuato. Scu- tellum quadratum, apice obtuso. Llytra lata, thorace paulum Jatiora, posticé subattenuata, punctata, nitida. Abdomen segmento penultimo tertio latiore. Femora antica robusta, margine inferiori ad medium angulato; media valde incras- sata, brevia, arcuata (latitudo media penitus tertiam partem longitudinis eequat); postica attenuata, ad medium subglo- bosa. Tibie anticzee ad basin leviter incurvatz, versus apicem latiores, margine juxta apicem obtusé angulato ; mediz breves, robustz, inflectae, subcylindrice ; postica elongate, graciles. TZ'ars: antici et postici articulo basali lato et magno, secundo minuto triangulari, penultimo pro- funde bilobato, ultimo curvato; medii articulo basali secun- dum vix superante. Unguiculi limbi ambo robusti, hamis ipsis minutis valde incurvatis et brevibus, The above diagnosis is taken from a single example of a most abnormal form of Eumolpide. Generally it resembles the species of Edusa, but is somewhat broader and less parallel; its striking peculiarity consists in the strange incrassation of its medial fe- of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 419 mora. I am told by its captor that the species jumps with strength and quickness. I have, from the same collection, a single example of what | take to be the female of the same species, resembling the typical form in every particular except the incrassation of the femora. Thaumastomerus viridis. Late ovatus, postice subattenuatus, punctatus, viridi-metalli- cus, nitidus: caput verticale, ad medium subdepressum, punctatum, labro rufo-fusco; thoraa crebré et inzequa- liter punctatus ; scutellum impunctatum; elytra lata, subde- pressa, punctata, punctis apud latera penitus veluti in rugis transverse ordinatis ; corpus subius nigro-viride ; pedes rufi; antenneé graciles, rufee, articulis ultimis fuscatis. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 2. Champion Bay. Taken by Mr. Du Boulay. Genus Enusa, Chevr. 1. Edusa aureoviridis. Brevis, lata; elytra striato-punctata et transversé rugosa ; sparsim albo-pubescens, aureo-viridis: caput leviter punc- tatum ; thorax transversus, angulis anticis depressis et acutis, fronte media prominenti, angulis posticis breviter rotundatis, margine basali transversé sinuato, lateribus submarginatis, crebré et leviter punctatus, ad latera rarius pubescens ; scutellum laté cordiforme, subtilissimé punctatum; elytra brevia, robusta, apice paulum elongata, striato-punctata, transversé rugosa, rugis minutis confertis versus suturam evidentioribus ; lavia, nitida, versus apicem subtiliter pu- bescentia; corpus subtus nigrum; pedes et antenne rufi. Long. corp. lin. 23 ; lat. lin, 13. 2. Edusa setosa. Robusta, punctata, eneo-nigra, pube albida obtecta: caput apud labrum utrinque breviter et oblique foveolatum, punctatum, basi sparsim pubescente, labro rufo; thorax transversus, margine basali arcuato, minuté punctatus, pube tenui albida vel omnino vel sparsim tectus ; scutellum quadra- tum, apice rotundato, leviter punctatum; elytra robusta, punctata, punctis crebris indistinctis et confusis, transversé rugosa, rugis minutis juxta suturam et basin evidentioribus, pube albida adpressa levi obtecta; corpus sublus nigrum, 420 Rev. H. Clark’s Descriptions testaceo-pubescens; pedes rufi, antenne rufe, articulis ad bases fusco-adumbratis. Long. corp. lin. 23; lat. lin. 13. 3. Edusa hispidula. Robusta, subtiliter punctata, nigra, pube crassa ornata vel obtecta: caput pube pallida omnino obtectum, labro testaceo; thorax transversus, omnino albido-pubescens (pube vix ut in E, setosd tenui sed spissa crassa et adpressa), infra pubem aureo-metallicus Wel nigro-aureus, haud niger; scutellum quadratum, apice rotundato, leviter punctatum; ut thorax, pubescens ; elytra robusta, levissime punctata, in exemplo unico pube crassa ad apicem et praesertim ad basin penitus obtecta, in exemplis integris sine dubio omnino obtecta ; corpus subtus fuscum, sed pube albida tenui frequenti obtec- tum; antenne et pedes rufi. Long. corp. lin, 24; lat. lin. 13. 4, Edusa nigro-enea. Robusta, transverse rugosa, pallidé pubescens, nigro-zenea ; caput punctatum, subtiliter pubescens, labro rufo-fusco; thorax transversus, angulis anticis valde depressis, margine basali sinuato et leviter marginato, crebré et inaequaliter punctatus, ad Jatera sparsim pubescens; scutellum quadra- tum, apice late rotundato, impunctatum ; e/ytra lata, paulum thorace latiora, transversim rugosa, rugis minutis inaequa- libus juxta suturam evidentioribus ; versus latera et apicem sparsim pubescentia; corpus subtus impubescens, nigrum ; pedes rufi; antenne rufée, articulis apud bases nigro-fuscatis. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 12. Genus Ocnus. Genus novum ex Lumolpidis, elongatum, parallelum, satis depressum, metaliicum. Caput haud verticale, penitus porrectum, labri margine anteriori emarginato, haud ut in genere Hdusd subrotundato.vel transverso. Z'horax quad- ratus, angulis anticis depressis et penitus rotundatis, margine postico sinuato. Scutellum quadratum, apice transversé obtuso. Llytra parallela, thorace paulum latiora, apice declivia. Antenne filiformes, graciles, versus apicem paulum incrassatee, Pedes plerumque ut in genere Ldusd. of New Phytophaga from Western Australia. 421 This genus is based upon examples which are imperfect ; it is, however, abundantly different from Edusa in its much more parallel, less robust, and more elongate form, in the less mani- fest inclination of the thorax, and in its more porrect head, and distinctly emarginate labrum. 1. Ocnus viridis. Rugosus, viridis, pedibus rufis: caput punctatum, labro levi rufo ; thorax quadratus, fortiter punctatus ; scutellum leviter punctis ad apicem ornatum ; elytra parallela, depressa, trans- versé rugosa et punctata, rugis apud medium distinctis versus apicem obsoletis ; antenne pallide rufee, apicibus fuscis ; corpus subtus nigrum, abdomine nigro-viridi; pedes rufi. Long. corp. lin. 3; lat. lin. 14. ( 423) XX. Descriptions of New Species of Bombyces from North Eastern India. By Freprertc Moore. [Read 5th June, 1865. ] 1. Bompyx SHERwILLI, n. sp. (PI. XXII. fig. 1.) Female.—Greyish-brown. Fore-wing with two dark brown curved lines near the base, and a third obliqtely traversing the disc from the costa to the inner margin, two short lines at the end of the discoidal cell, and a submarginal line recurving from near the apex to the outer angle, the falcated space at the apex being fuliginous. Hind-wing darker brown, with numerous mi- nute grey irrorations, and having a_ pale-margined submarginal line ; on the inner margin are two black and white spots. Body with a dark ashy waistband and a black anal tuft. Expanse of female 23 inches. Habitat. N. E. India (Capt. J. L. Sherwill). Remark.—This species is allied to Bombyx Huttoni, Westw., but may be distinguished from it by being somewhat larger and of a greyer colour, the fore-wing having the apical patch fuli- ginous instead of black, and it has only a single transverse discal streak. A prominent character is that the abdomen is tipt with black. See this species noticed, ante, p. 324. 2. Saturnia Crvosa, n. sp. (PI. XXII. fig. 2.) Wings milky-white, each with an ordinary-sized black ocellus, with a yellow circle partly surrounded by a bluish-white lunule, and a central vitreous streak. Across the dise is a dark zig-zag double line, terminating at the apex by black streaks and bounded outwardly by a broad brown band; outer margin pale brown ; near the base of the wing an irregular dark brown band, mar- gined inwardly with pink. Thorax and abdominal tuft brown. Expanse 43 inches. Habitat. N. E. India (Capt. J. L. Sherwill). VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART V.—SEPT. 1865. HH & 424 Mr. F. Moore’s Descriptions Remark.—This species is closely allied to Sat. Pyretorum (figured in Westw. Orient. Ent. pl. xxiv), but differs in the fore-wing in the broader and less dentated transverse zig-zag double line—this, at the apex of the wing, having the space beneath the lowest black streak white ; the irregular transverse band before the ocellus is situated more towards the base of the wing, commencing from the base of the discoidal cell and not medially between it and the ocellus, as in S. Pyretorum; the extreme base of the wing is white. In the hind-wing the ill- defined transverse streak is nearer the base; and the submarginal band and the zig-zag double line are broader. 8. Saturnia LinpiA, n. sp. (PI. XXII. fig. 3.) Greyish-brown, wings suffused with pink, each having a small black ocellus, with a reddish-brown circle, margined within on the inner half by a white lunule; a dark zig-zag double line across the disc, terminated on the fore-wing at the apex with a black streak and a pale space, the outer line being the darkest ; between this and the outer margin is a double series of brown lunules ; across the base of the wing from near the base of the discoidal cell to the inner margin is an irregular black line with an inner border of pink; nearer the base is a dark suffused streak ; the front of the thorax is dark grey, the top of the same dark brown. Expanse of male 3%, female 32 inches. Habitat. N. E. India (Capt. James Lind Sherwill). Remark.— Allied to Sat. Grote, figured in P. Z. S. (1859), An- nulosa, pl. Ixv. f. 2. ° 4, Lorpa Miranpa, n. sp. (Atkinson, MS.) Wings buff-yellow. ‘Thorax and costal margin of fore-wing, to within one-third of its length, purple-grey. Ocelli clay-brown, of an uniform oval shape, each having a pale central streak and a pure white curved line, the ocellus of the fore-wing being also bordered with black on its inner half. Both wings with an irre- gular transverse crimson line near the base, a single and a double zig-zag black line across the disc, the latter on the fore-wing terminating at the apex in a purple-grey and crimson patch di- vided by a short zig-zag white line, and having beneath it a small black patch; there is a submarginal ser‘es of double pale clay- brown lunules, the division between them being by a pale white line. The sexes are alike in colour and markings. Expanse of g 53 ins., of 2 5 inches. Habitat. Darjeeling. of New Species of Bombyces from N. E. India, 425 Remark.—For the discovery of this fine species of Loepa we are indebted to Mr. W. S. Atkinson of Calcutta. It may be known at once from L. Katinka (Westw. Orient. Ent. pl. xii. f. 2) by its much larger size. Having recently examined several specimens brought home by Mr. A. E. Russell, and which are now being distributed in various collections, I have taken this opportunity of securing the name which has been given to it by its discoverer, DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XXII. Fig. 1. Bombyzr Sherwilli. 2. Saturnia Cidosa. 3. > Lindia. Hebe ( 427 ) XXI. Descriptions of New Genera and Species of Phy- tophaga. By Joseru S. Baty, F.LS. [Read Sth August, 1865.] List of new Species. Scelodonta Murray. Colasposoma igneicolle. JSulvicorne. viridiceneum. viridivittatum. Podontia scaphoides. maculatissima. Mouhoti. Blepharida Chiliensis. Notozona histrionica. Jlavipustulata, Batesii. Adorium tarsatum. sordidum. Hylaspes (n. g.) longicornis. Buphonida (n. g.) evanida. A getocera lobicarnis. Hopii. Coelomera Batesit. ornata. Cinzia. Fam. EUMOLPIDE. Genus ScreLoponta, Westw. Scelodonta Murrayi. Subelongata, subcylindrica, viridi-eenea, nitida, supra rugoso- punctata; thorace transversim elevato-strigoso ; elytris tuber- culatis. Long. 24 lin. Hab. Old Calabar. Bright metallic green. Head coarsely rugose, epistome pro- duced at its apex into two ill-defined obtuse teeth, front flattened, impressed in the middle with a longitudinal groove, orbital 428 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of grooves strongly marked; eyes entire, prominent; antennz scarcely more than half the length of the body, slender, their outer half black, five outer joints slightly thickened. Thorax rather longer than broad, sides rounded, notched at the base, slightly converging from just behind their middle to the apex, la- teral border narrowly margined, finely crenulate; upper surface closely covered with numerous short transverse raised striz. Elytra coarsely rugose-punctate, each with eight or nine longi- tudinal rows of tubercles, the rows absent from the basal por- tion of the inner disc near the suture, and from the transverse portion of the elytron immediately below the basilar space; to- wards the apex of the elytron the tubercles form short longitu- dinal costes. Thighs armed beneath with a short acute spine. Genus Cortasposoma, Laporte. Colusposoma igneicolle. Late oblongum, convexum, viridi-zeneum; tarsis antennisque (his basi fulva exceptis) piceis ; thorace aureo; elytris late metallico-ceeruleis, margine laterali suturaque viridi-zneis. Long. 24 lin. Hab. Siam. Head punctured, impressed between the upper portion of the eyes with an ill-defined semicircular groove ; labrum and a space on the inner orbit aureous, a small patch at the base of either an- tenna bright metallic blue; antenna nearly equal to the body in Jength, slender, filiform, four lower joints obscure fulvous, stained on their upper surface with piceous, basal joint stained above with a fusco-zneous patch. Thorax at the base nearly three times as broad as long ; sides rounded at the base, obliquely con- verging and slightly rounded from behind their middle to the apex, lateral margin reflexed ; upper surface deeply but not very closely punctured. Scutellum semiovate, igneo-zeneous. Elytra nearly four times the length of the thorax, sides parallel, apex broadly rounded; above convex, transversely depressed below the basilar space, deeply but not coarsely punctured, the punc- tures arranged in ill-defined longitudinal striz ; on the outer disc in front are numerous coarse strongly-raised irregular transverse rug; on the hinder portion of the outer disc, as well as near the suture, are a number of elevated longitudinal coste. Colasposoma fulvicorne. Late ovatum, convexum, subtus czruleo- aut violaceo-eneum, supra viridi-aneum ; antennis pallide fulvis, articulis duobus New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 429 ultimis apice piceis; capite thoraceque subremote punctatis ; elytris fortiter subseriatim punctatis, antice rude transversim rugulosis, postice ad apicem longitudinaliter costatis. Var. A. Corpore subtus nigro-piceo, supra cupreo. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Siam. Head subremotely punctured, front impressed with a broad longitudinal groove ; epistome triangular, its apex obsolete; la- brum obscure fulvous. Thorax at the base nearly three times as broad as long; basal margin truncate and slightly oblique on either side, medial lobe nearly obsolete, its apex broadly obtuse ; sides converging and slightly rounded from base to apex; upper surface smooth, subremotely punctured. Elytra each slightly excavated in the middle below the basilar space, coarsely punc- tured, interspaces raised into coarse irregular transverse reticula- tions ; towards the apex of the elytra they form broad longitu- dinal costee, which are most distinct near the suture and outer margin. Colasposoma viridieneum. Anguste oblongo-ovatum, convexum, viridi-zeneum ; tarsis an- tennisque piceis, his basi fulvis; capite thoraceque fortiter et crebre punctatis, illo plano, utrinque intra insertionem an- tennarum longitudinaliter elevato, hoc ante apicem transversim costato; elytris fortiter puvctatis, crebre transversim elevato- reticulatis. Long. 2¢ lin. Hab. Siam (Laos), Bright metallic green, breast and abdomen rather more ob- scure than the rest of the body. Head closely and coarsely punctured, subrugose; face depressed and flattened between the eyes, the lateral margin of the depressed portion thickened and forming a raised longitudinal edge close to the insertion of each antenna, sutural lines between the epistome and face entirely ob- solete ; labrum and palpi pale fulvous, ‘Thorax more than three times as broad as long, basal margin truncate on either side, medial lobe distinctly produced; sides rounded, converging in front ; upper surface closely and deeply punctured, immediately behind the apical border is a narrow transverse distinctly raised line, which extends about one-fourth part across the thorax, 430 Mr. J. 8. Baly’s Descriptions of Colasposoma viridivittatum. Late ovatum, convexum, obscure cupreo-piceum, supra aureo- cupreum ; antennis fulvis, articulis quinque ultimis apice infuscatis ; capite thoraceque crebre punctatis, illo facie inferiori, hoe limbo viridi-aneis ; elytris fortiter subcrebre punctatis, extus ad lJatera transversim elevato-rugulosis, limbo angusto (basi preetermissA) vittaque lat& a basi fere ad apicem extensa viridi-aneis. Long. 3 lin. Hab. Banks of the Niger. Face excavated between the eyes, the extreme vertex, together with the lower two-thirds of the epistome, metallic green; labrum fulvous, the whole surface of the head closely covered with oblong punctures, epistome obliquely strigose. Thorax at its base nearly three times as broad as long, sides rounded and narrowed from base to apex, anterior and posterior angles acute ; upper surface closely covered with somewhat oblong punctures, the centre of the dise rather less closely punctured. Elytra more deeply but less closely punctured than the thorax, the punctures arranged in ill-defined longitudinal striz ; the surface below the basilar space not depressed, Fam. GALLERUCID. Sub-fam. HALTICIN A. Genus Popont1a, Dalm. Podontia scaphoides. Elongato-ovata, postice paullo attenuata, convexa, fulvo-fusca, nitida; antennis extrorsum, pectore, femorum apice tibiisque piceis ; thorace ante medium utrinque flexuoso-impresso, basi breviter bisulcato; elytris obscure fusco-fulvis, flavo-irro- ratis, fortiter punctato-striatis, striis apicem versus leviter sul- catis, punctis piceis. Long. 4—44 lin. Hab. Northern China. Antenne scarcely half the length of the body, four lower joints flavous, the rest piceous. Thorax more than twice as broad as long, sides straight and parallel, converging in front, anterior angles produced into a short slightly recurved tubercle ; upper surface smooth, the anterior impressions strongly incurved, their apices almost confluent; from about the middle of their outer New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 431 edge a single row of punctures extends halfway to the lateral margin; on each side just within the outer border are two distinct fovez ; in the middle, immediately in front of the basal margin, is a third, less defined ; the general surface of the dise finely but subremotely punctured. Elytra narrowly ovate, narrowed towards their apex, strongly punctate-striate, the striz lightly sulcate to- ward their apex, where also their interspaces become obsoletely convex ; near the apex of each elytron is a large moderately deep depression ; the small flavous spots are scattered irregularly over the whole surface of the elytra, Podontia maculatissima. Elongata, convexa, fulvo-picea, nitida; antennis (basi excepta) nigris ; thorace ante medium utringue oblique impresso, basi longitudinaliter bisulcato ; elytris pallide castaneis, basi et ad latera nigris, fortiter punctato-striatis, striis (praesertim ad apicem) sulcatis, interspatiis convexiusculis, pustulis flavis numerosis seriatim dispositis ornatis. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Port Essington, Australia. Thorax twice as broad as long, sides subparallel, sinuate behind their middle, slightly produced just beyond the latter, thence quickly converging to their apex, anterior angles tuberculate ; basal margin sinuate on either side, medial lobe slightly produced ; upper surface smooth ; on either side in front is an oblique groove, which commences at a little distance within the anterior angle and terminates just below the middle of the thorax; from its outer edge a transverse branch is given off which passes almost directly outwards to about the middle of the lateral margin, its surface being impressed with a single row of deep punctures; on either side at the base is a short longitudinal sulcus, external to which, between it and the outer border, is a deep fovea; the whole sur- face of the disc is free from punctures, with the exception of a broad semicircular space on its hinder portion, which is impressed with large deep punctures. Elytra narrowly ovate, slightly nar- rowed posteriorly, sides nearly parallel, each elytron impressed with eleven rows of deep punctures, the first row short; the punctures are regularly placed in a single line on-each stria;_ the striz (the middle of the basal portion of the disc excepted) sul- cate. Podontia Mouhoti. Elongata, convexa, castanea, nitida; antennis elytrisque flavis, ’ b ’ his piceo-marmoratis, fortiter punctato-striatis, striis apicem 432 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of versus sulcatis, punctis piceis; thorace basi longitudinaliter bisulcato, antice utrinque flexuoso-impresso. Long. 5 lin. Hab. Mountains of Laos, Siam; collected by the late M. Mouhot. Very similar in form, sculpture and coloration to P. maculatis- sima; narrower than that insect, and the pattern on the elytra dif- ferently arranged. Antenne flavous, rather more than half the length of the body. Thorax narrower than in P. maculalissima, the two anterior grooves more strongly flexuose, and the branch which they send from the middle of their outer edge shorter and not reaching more than halfway to the lateral border; on either side at the base, placed just within the short longitudinal groove, is a large patch of coarse deeply impressed punctures. The elytra are punctured in a similar manner to the preceding insect, the strize are, however, not impressed on the anterior half of the surface, but are more deeply sulcate on the hinder portion, the interspaces (plane in front) becoming strongly convex behind;° the castaneous markings are chiefly congregated in masses, which form three large ill-defined transverse patches, placed longitudi- nally down the middle of the back. Genus Brepuaripa, Chevr. Blepharida Chitiensis. Anguste ovata, valde convexa, pailide rufo-fusca, nitida ; capite thoraceque fulvis; antennis (basi excepta) nigris; elytris fortiter punctato-striatis, punctis piceis, striis (praesertim ad apicem) sulcatis, vitta submarginali irregulari lata macalisque numerosis disci albidis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Chili. Antenne moderately robust, half the length of the body, four lower joints obscure fulvous, stained above with piceous, the rest black; face coarsely but not closely punctured, vertex nearly impunctate. ‘Thorax more than twice as broad as long, sides ob- tusely rounded, converging in front, anterior angles produced into an obtuse tubercle, hinder angles rounded, nearly obsolete ; upper surface irregularly punctured. Elytra impressed each with eleven regular rows of deep piceous punctures, the first row short; rows distinctly but slightly suleate on the sides and towards the apex of the elytron, interspaces flat, obsoletely convex towards their apex; each elytron covered with a number of small irregular New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 433 very pale yellowish-white spots ; in addition, near the outer border, is a broad irregularly-defined submarginal stripe of the same colour ; this stripe, commencing at the humeral angle, continues entire for two-thirds of the length of the elytron, it then becomes gradually broken up and lost in the general colouring of the surface. Four hinder tibiz armed each with a short stout obtuse tooth. Genus Nortozona, Clark. Notozona histrionica, Anguste ovata, valde convexa, corallina, nitida; antennis ex- trorsum scutelloque nigris ; antennarum basi elytrisque flavis, his regulariter punctato-striatis; margine Jaterali, sutura ad apicem, maculis magnis tribus (duabus infra basin, una ante apicem), fasciaque lata centrali utrinque abbreviata, nigris; femoribus posticis subtus unispinosis, ' Long. 4 lin. Hab. Mexico. Antenne rather more than half the length of the body, five upper joints black, the basal one fulvous, the remaining joints, toge- ther with the base and apex of the seventh, yellow. Thorax three times as broad as long, sides slightly rounded and con- verging from base to apex, anterior angles produced into a slightly recurved subacute tubercle; hinder angles distinct, obtuse ; basal margin sinuate on either side near the middle portion, which is obtusely lobed; upper surface faintly excavated within the lateral border; the base impressed on either side with an indistinct fovea; on the hinder disc, just in front of the base, is also a small shallow depression ; surface minutely but not closely punctured ; on the middle of the thorax is a single semi- circular row of larger punctures, which, commencing on either side on the apical border, extends backwards two-thirds across the disc. Elytra impressed each with eleven rows of distinct punc- tures, placed in a single regular line on each row, the first row short, interspaces smooth, impunctate, very faintly convex, the extreme lateral margin, together with the hinder half of the suture, narrowly edged with black; at the apex of the lateral border, as also on the suture, a very narrow line of rufous is interposed between the black colour and the edge of the elytron, so that the black line becomes submarginal ; on each elytron are three large black patches and a broad transverse band of the same colour; this band, which is placed across the middle, is abbreviated on both the extreme sutural and lateral borders; of the patches 434 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of two are parallel, and placed just below the basal margin, the outer one subtrigonate and attached by a slender line to the base itself, the inner one subrotundate ; the third, also subrotundate, occupies the middle disc about halfway between the transverse fascia and the apex of the elytron. Body beneath clothed with coarse ful- vous hairs. Hinder thighs very robust, armed beneath with a short stout tooth. Notozona flavipustulata. Elongato-ovata, convexa, rufo-testacea, nitida; antennis, tibiis tarsisque piceis, femoribus flavis, apice rufo-piceis; elytris distincte punctato-striatis, singulis apice et pustulis magnis tribus flavis. Long. 3¢ lin. Hab. Brazil. Head short; labrum flavous; facial plates subquadrate ; an- tenn four-fifths the length of the body, piceous, paler towards the apex. Thorax nearly three times as broad as long, sides rounded, scarcely converging in front, anterior angles thickened, hinder angles nearly obsolete ; upper surface finely but not closely punctured ; in the middle, just in front of the basal margin, is a short ill-defined transverse depression. Elytra distinctly punc- tate-striate, the punctures placed irregularly on each stria; the flavous patches are all transverse, and are arranged as follows: one at the base; another about the middle, slightly oblique, and forming a broad fascia abbreviated at either end; whilst the third, which also forms an abbreviated band, is placed about halfway between the middle and the apex. Notozona Batesii. Elongato-ovata, convexa, flava, nitida; antennarum articulis intermediis, tibiis tarsisque nigris ; elytris distincte punctato- striatis, singulis puncto humerali maculisque tribus inter se et cum illis elytri alterius seepe confluentibus pallide cas- taneis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Amazons. Antenne rather more than half the length of the body, four lower joints obscure flavous, stained with piceous above, three upper joints dirty white, the others entirely black. ‘Thorax very similar in form and punctuation to N. flavipustulata, but with- out the transverse depression at its base. Elytra punctured as New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 435 in N. flavipustulata; the spots on the surface of each are placed longitudinally on the middle disc, one below the base ; the second, about the middle, is attached at the suture to its fellow on the opposite elytron; the third, larger than the others, is placed half- way between the middle and the apex, and is also confluent at the suture, frequently sending a ramus along the suture itself to join the second patch, Sub-fam. GALLERUCIN &. Genus Aporium, Fabr. Adorium tarsatum. Ovale, sordide flavo-album; oculis antennisqueextrorsum nigris ; thorace tenuissime, elytris tenuiter punctatis; subtus nigro- piceum, abdominis vitta centrali segmentorumque marginibus albo-flavis; pedibus flavo-albis, femorum maculis, tibiis apice tarsisque nigro-fuscis. Long. 6 lin. Hab. Northern China. Subdiaphanous. Face impressed with a deep triangular fovea, at the apex of which is a small black spot; antenne less than half the length of the body, robust, slightly thickened towards their apex, third joint equal to the fourth, five apical joints black, the sixth fuscous. Thorax rather more than twice as broad as long, sides rounded, converging towards the apex, their lateral border slightly but distinctly reflexed; surface of disc minutely punc- tured. Elytra ovate, their basal margin slightly excavated; surface finely punctured, humeral callus bounded externally by a semilunate depression ; lateral margin moderately dilated, shoulders scarcely prominent in front, obliquely rounded. Adorium sordidum. Late ovatum, pallide fulvo-fuscum, corpore subtus pedibusque fusco-variegatis ; tarsis, abdominis maculis, antennarumque articulis 5 ultimis nigro-fuscis ; thorace tenuissime punctato ; elytris sordide fulvis, distincte subcrebre punctatis, margine laterali modice dilatato, pallide fulvo-fusco. Long. 53 lin. Hab. Northern China. Broader and shorter than 4. tarsatum. Face impressed with a triangular fovea; antennz robust, filiform, the third joint scarcely longer than the fourth, Thorax more than twice as broad as 456 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of Jong, sides rounded, ccnverging towards their apex, broadly reflexed; upper surface minutely punctured. Scutellum trian- gular. Elytra very slightly excavated at their base, sides mode- rately dilated, shoulders obliquely rounded; upper surface dis- tinctly punctured ; humeral callus bounded externally by a curved groove. Genus Hytaspes. Corpus oblongum, convexum. Caput exsertum, parvum; facie perpendiculari, trigona; oculis prominulis, ovato-rotun- datis, integris ; antennis 11-articulatis, corporis longitudine paullo longioribus, serratis, articulo Imo curvato a basi ad apicem incrassato, 2do et 3tio minutis equalibus, caeteris com- pressis, singulis longitudine tribus preecedentibus aequalibus, basi angustatis, intus ad apicem angulato-dilatatis. Thorax transversus, utrinque transversim sulcatus. J/lytra thorace Jatiora, parallela, convexa, infra basin non transversim im- pressa, punctato-striata, Pedes sat elongati ; coxts anticis con- tiguis; femoribus posticis non incrassatis; (2bis posticis quatuor apice spina minut& armatis. Mesosternum obsoletum. Meta- sternum inter coxas intermedias in spinam validam obtusam productum. Type Hylaspes longicornis. The peculiar form of the antennz will at once distinguish the present genus from Laphris, Doryxena, and other allied forms with which it has in common a metasternal spine. Hylaspes longicornis. Elongato-oblonga, flava, nitida; antennis (basi excepta) tibiis tarsisque nigris, Long. 5 lin. Hab. Himalayas. Pale yellow. Head smooth; epistome flat, trigonate; eyes black ; antennee rather longer than the body, tapering at the base and apex, their three lower joints fulvous, the rest black. Thorax twice as broad as long, sides straight, narrowly margined, anterior angles oblique, thickened; upper surface impressed with a broad transverse groove, which is less deep and nearly interrupted in the centre of the disc; surface remotely punctured. Elytra parallel, regularly rounded at their apex, convex, finely punctate-striate, the puncturing less regular and Jess distinet on the sides and APEX. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 437 Genus Buruonrpa. Corpus elongatum, modice convexum. Caput exsertum, supra tumidum ; facie brevi, perpendiculari; antennis gracilibus, fili- formibus, articulo 3tio quarto breviori; ocudis prominulis, in- tegris. Thorax transversus, dorso plus minusve transversim excavatus. Scutellum trigonum. £lytrathorace latiora, apicem versus paullo ampliata, apice rotundata, modice convexa, dorso plus minusve deplanata, irregulariter punctata, pube adpressa brevi vestita, limbo inflexo obliquo, ante medium desinente, interdum obsoleto. Pedes graciles ; coxis anticis erectis, con- tiguis ; femoribus posticis non incrassatis ; f2biis omnibus apice muticis ; wnguiculis bifidis, aut acute appendiculatis. Type Buphonida evanida. The swollen head separates this genus from Galleruca, next to which it must be placed. Buphonida evanida. Elongata, convexa, fusco-fulva, nitida; oculis nigris; elytris crebre punctatis, pallide rufo-violaceis, metallico vix tinctis, limbo laterali vittaque suturali, hac postice abbreviataé, me- tallico-czeruleis. Long. 4 lin. Hab. Southern India. Head strongly exserted, smooth and shining, glabrous, finely but somewhat distantly punctured, the whole impressed with a fine longitudinal groove, which extends from the front edge of the epistome backwards to the neck; epistome and _ facial plates transverse; eyes black; antenne two-thirds the length of the body. Thorax short, three times-as broad as long, surface glabrous, impunctate on the disc, sides finely but not closely punctured; on either side is a deep transverse groove. Elytra much broader than the thorax, nearly five times its length, sides distinctly dilated posteriorly; closely punctured, clothed with adpressed fulvo-fuscous hairs. Genus Acertocrra, Hope. A getocera lobicornis. Subelongata, robusta, convexa, pallide rufo-fulva, nitida; an- tennis flavis; genubus, tibiis, tarsis elytrisque nigris. Mas.—Antennarum articulis 24 ad 8"™ brevibus, 9"° elon- gato, valde incrassato, extus leviter excavato, apice extus in 438 Mr. J. S. Baly’s Descriptions of lobum compressum obtusum oblique producto, 10™ ad J2mem filiformibus. Fcem.—Antennis subfusiformibus, articulis cylindricis non dila- tatis. Long. 53 lin. Hab. India. Head elongate, front impressed with a deep fovea, eyes and apex of jaws black. Antenne entirely flavous; basal joint (¢) thick- ened; second short, moniliform ; third and fourth nearly equal, each rather longer than the second, obconic; fifth rather shorter than the fourth; sixth, seventh and eighth very short, transverse, gradually increasing in thickness (all the preceding joints are cylindrical, and truncate at their apices); ninth equal in length to the four preceding, greatly swollen, its outer edge lightly exca- vated, its apex at the outer angle strongly produced into a flat- tened obtuse lobe; three following joints filiform, of normal thickness, gradually tapering to the apex, conjointly rather longer than the ninth joint: in the 9 the antenna are lightly subfusi- form, the joints being entirely cylindrical and of normal form; the basal joint is moderately thickened ; the second short, obconic ; the third more than one-half longer than the second ; the fourth and fifth equal, and each rather longer than the third (the three preceding joints gradually increase in thickness from base to apex) ; the sixth and two following nearly equal in length (the seventh rather the longest), rather shorter than the fifth, somewhat thicker than the preceding; ninth, tenth and eleventh equal, slightly elongate; twelfth shorter, acute; the last three joints gradually diminish in thickness from the ninth. Thorax transverse, sides narrowly margined, their anterior half dilated; upper surface smooth, sparingly punctured, impressed just behind the middle with a deep bisinuate groove. Scutellum semiovate, its apex ob- tuse. Elytra oblong, slightly dilated posteriorly, convex, each impressed with a broad sulcation, which, running close to the suture and bounding the inner margin of the basilar space, curves outwardly along the lower edge of the latter and terminates at the junction of the inner and outer discs ; about the middle of each elytron, near the lateral margin, is a broad transverse excavated space ; general surface obsoletely punctured. Agetocera Hopi. Subelongata, robusta, convexa, flavo-fulva, nitida; antennis apice, tibiis (basi excepta) tarsisque nigris; elytris obscure purpureis, subcrebre punctatis. New Genera and Species of Phytophaga. 439 Mas.—Antennarum articulis 24° ad 7™"™ brevissimis, 8° elon- gato, valde incrassato, 9"° difformi, extus valde emarginato, ceteris filiformibus, duobus ultimis nigris. Foem.—Antennis filiformibus. Long. 6 lin, Hab. Northern India. The male of this species may at once be known from the same sex of the preceding insect by the eighth joint of its antenne being the most swollen (instead of the ninth), the apex of this joint being obtuse and without the slightest trace of lobe or pro- cess; the ninth joint, however, is also dilated and compressed, and has its outer edge deeply notched; the three terminal joints are longer, rather more slender, and of equal thickness throughout ; front smooth, impressed with a large deep fovea. Thorax rather broader, sides dilated in front as in 4. lobicornis ; upper surface smooth and shining, impunctate, impressed behind the middle with three deep fovez, two transverse, placed one on either side, are the remains of the transverse sulcation found in the former species; the third, shallower and less distinct, is placed in the mid- dle, rather behind the two others, just in front of the basal margin. Elytra sulcate at their base and with the transverse late- ral excavation as in A. lobicornis; in addition, a broad suleation ex- tends nearly the whole length of the elytron just within the lateral border. In the 2 the antenne are filiform, very slightly tapering to the apex: second joint short; third, fourth and fifth each about the length of the first; sixth to the eighth each rather shorter, equal; ninth about equal to the first and second; tenth and eleventh gradually increasing in length ; these three last joints rather less robust than the preceding. Genus Caromera, Erichs. Ceelomera Batesii. Lete metallico-cerulea aut purpurea, viridi vix tincta, subtus pube adpressa fulva dense vestita; antennis nigris; thorace elytrisque crebre punctatis et pube brevissima indutis, his é valde, 2 modice ampliatis, fascia lata fulva prope medium posita ornatis. Long. 9 lin. Hab. Upper Amazons. This species is very closely allied to C. equestris, Fab.; the latter insect is bright metallic green on the upper surface of the body, its elytra being at the same time more closely and coarsely VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART V.—SEPT. 1865. it 440 Mr. J.S. Baly’s Descriptions of Phytophaga. punctured and almost granulose; the transverse fulvous band is also much narrower in the middle and somewhat dilated pos- teriorly on either side as it approaches the lateral border of the elytron, its hinder margin thus forming a regular curve, the con- vexity of which is directed forwards: in C. Batesii the hinder edge is almost straight; in all its other characters the present species agrees entirely with C. equestris. Coelomera ornata. Nigra, subtus pube adpressa tenuissima vestita; elytris ¢ valde ampliatis, brevissime fulvo-sericeis, crebre punctatis, subgra- nulosis, fulvis, subopacis, plagd magna ovata transversa vix pone medium posita, vitta lata suturali a basi ad plagam ex- tensa, plagaque humerali subelongaté a humero fere ad medium continuata, obscure viridibus aut ceruleis. Long. 9 lin. : Hab. Bogota. Almost entirely similar in form to C. Batesii, but rather more flattened above. Thorax finely and less closely punctured, broadly excavated transversely, disc glabrous, sides clothed with a few silky hairs. Body beneath somewhat sparingly clothed with fine silky pubescence. Coaclomera Cinzia. Nigro-picea, pube adpressa fulvo-fuscd vestita, supra fulvo- testacea, subnitida; oculis antennisque nigris; elytris postice late explanatis, crebre punctatis, pube brevissima obsitis, parte tertia apicali czruleis. Long. 7 lin. Hab. Upper Amazons. Closely resembling C, Batesii in form, but distinguished from that species and from C. ornata by its totally different coloration. The third joint of the antenne is about equal in length to the first and second taken conjointly, and nearly twice as long as the fourth; the fifth equal to the fourth; the sixth and four follow- ing joints gradually decrease in length; the eleventh is rather longer than the tenth. Thorax transversely concave, sides deeply excavated, laterai border reflexed in front. > 44h XXII. Characters of a new Genus and Species of Chalci- dites. By F. Waker, F.L.S. [Read 2nd October, 1865. | Tue Hymenopterous insect here mentioned is from North Australia, and is in the possession of F. Smith, Esq., who has kindly allowed me to describe it. Its apparent resemblance to some of the ant tribe is very striking, and the purpose of this mimicry has been often noticed in recent publications. It seems to have most affinity to the Cleonymide ; but like some other exotic genera it has a peculiar structure, which distinguishes it from all the hitherto defined groups of Chalcidites. Genus Myrmecopsis. Mas.—Corpus robustum, apterum. Caput scabrum, sparse pubescens, transversum, thorace non angustius; facies transverse sulcata. Oculi magni. Ocelli tres. Mandibulz parve. Antennz flagelliformes, apud os inserta, thorace vix breviores ; articulus 1"° facie non brevior; 2% elongatus; 5¥s 1m dimidio, 2° duplo longior; 4"% et sequentes breves; 13" longé conicus, 12™° longior. Thorax scaber, sparse pubescens. Prothorax transversus, quadratus, bene deter- minatus ; latera marginata. Mesothorax brevissimus; scutum parapsidum suturis distinctis; scutellum scuto multo brevius. Metathorax quadratus, bene determinatus, mesothorace brevior, margine postico setoso aciculato bidentato. Petiolus brevissimus. Abdomen ellipticum, glabrum, convexum, apice setosum, thorace latius et multo brevius, segmento uno dorsali. Pedes robusti; tibize calcaribus parvis; tarsi subarcuati, 5- articulati; femora antica subincrassata. Male.—Body stout, with hardly any rudiments of wings. Head and thorax scabrous, thinly pubescent. Head fully as broad as the thorax ; face vertical, with transverse furrows. Eyes large, not prominent. Ocelli three, as usual. Mandibles small. Antenne nearly as long as the thorax, inserted close to the mouth, imcreas- ing in breadth from the Ist joint to the 7th, tapering thence to the tips; Ist joint or scape as long as the face; 2nd elongate; 3rd VOL, II, THIRD SERIES, PART VI.—FEB. 1866. EK 442 Mr. F. Walker’s Notes on Chalcidites. twice the length of the 2nd, and more than half the length of the Ist; all the following joints short, 13th elongate, conical, longer than the 12th. Prothorax quadrate, much developed, broader than long, with a slight rim along each side. Mesothorax very short, hardly as broad as the prothorax. Scutum hardly half the length of the prothorax; sutures of the parapsides dis- tinct. Scutellum much shorter than the scutum. Metathorax quadrate, well developed, shorter than the mesothorax; hind border with a short stout spine on each side, and with a ridge in the middle. Petiole extremely short. Abdomen elliptical, smooth, shining, convex, broader and very much shorter than the thorax, with only one dorsal segment; tip setose. Legs stout; tibize with two short apical spurs; tarsi 5-jointed, slightly curved, the Joints successively decreasing in length; fore-femora slightly in- crassated. Myrmecopsis nigricans. Mas.—M. viridi-nigra ; antenne nigre, basi fulve ; abdomen cupreo-nigrum ; pedes rufi, tarsis nigricantibus. Male.—Greenish black. Antenne black; 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th joints tawny. Abdomen cupreous-black. Legs red; tarsi blackish. Length of the body, 2# lines. Hab.—Northern Australia. ( 443 ) XXIII. Remarks on Captain Hutton’s Paper “‘ On the Reversion and Restoration of the Silkworm.” By Captain J. MircuEx., Superintendent of the Govern- ment Museum, Madras. (Communicated by the Sz- CRETARY.) | [Read 6th November, 1865.] Tue passage in Captain Hutton’s Paper with which my remarks are concerned is as follows :— “Tn the introductory remarks to my ‘ Monograph on the Genus Attacus,’ IT have shown, after Kirby and Spence and other autho- rities, that the gum from the reservoirs, being conveyed to the mouth by the constriction of certain muscles, passes through two small orifices in the lip, and the two fibres thus formed, being taken up and tnisted together by the hook-like processes in the mouth appointed to that office, become one fibre of silk on coming into contact with the cold external air.”* (The Italics are mine.) Now it is quite certain the authorities referred to by Captain Hutton could not have examined, with sufficient optical assistance, silk taken directly from the cocoon, or they would have seen that no such twisting takes place, but that the two filaments are laid side by side in the cocoon, and adhere together until separated by the solution of the gum in the process of manufacture. I have examined cocoons, and reeled raw silks, contained in the Museum Collection, and have, in every instance, found a double filament. But in bleached spun silk the filaments are single, because the gum which held them together has been washed away in the process of bleaching. I have only the introduction to Kirby and Spence, which does not contain the information referred to by Captain Hutton, but I am aware that other writers, upon whose authority we ought to be able to rely, have stated that the silkworm spins a single thread— such, for instance, as T. R. Jones, at p. 297 of the first edition of his undoubtedly interesting work ** A General Outline of the Animal Kingdom;” Dr. Carpenter, at p. 110 of the second volume of his “ Zoology ;” “The Micrographic Dictionary,” at p- 360 of the first edition, article “Spinning Organs ;” and there are probably other authorities that might be quoted who have said * Vide ante, p.159. KK 2 444, Captain J. Mitchell's Remarks, §c. that the filament is single. A correct description of the way in which the silk is deposited in the cocoon will be found at p. 200 of Adams’ Essays on the Microscope, published nearly seventy years since. It is, I believe, commonly supposed that the silk spun by every species of silk-producer, that is usually manufactured, is alike in form; but that is not the case. All the ordinary silk that I have examined is cylindrical, or nearly so; but the common Tussah silk, fronr Antherea Paphia, is flat, and I have satisfied myself that each filament consists of a large number of very fine fibres held together by some substance that makes it very difficult to separate them. I have, however, succeeded so far as to justify me in saying that the filament is compound, and that the finest fibres I have obtained measure about s<45 th of an inch in diameter. The filaments spun by Altacus Atlas and Actias Selene also appear to be compound, but the structure is not so marked as in Antherea, and I have not yet tried to separate their fibres. The foregoing remarks on Tussah silk are founded on observa- tions made some days since. I have just had time before closing this letter to re-examine some that have been in water for many days, and I find the filaments are gradually breaking up into their component fibres, and 1 hope they will eventually all separate and enable me to mount specimens for permanent record. I have only to add that, having had occasion to write to Captain Hutton, I pointed out the mistake about the filament, and he said in reply, that if I had discovered the two filaments were laid side by side and not twisted, I ought to make the fact known, as at present the idea prevailed amongst Entomologists that the two fibres were twisted after issuing from the orifice in the lip. XXIV. On the British Species of Agathidium. By Davip Suarp. [Read 6th November, 1865.] Turoven the kindness of my Entomological friends, I have recently been able to examine the specimens of our native Aga- thidia contained in most of the principal collections, and have thought the following short notes on the genus might not he altogether unacceptable. I have also examined the Stephensian collection in the British Museum, and believe the account given below of the insects placed in that collection under the generic name of Agathidium will be found correct. Stephens in his “Illustrations of British Entomology ”’ has de- scribed three species of Agathidium, which he supposed to be un- described by foreign authors, viz :—Agathidium ruficolle, A. affine, and A. rufipes ; and for the first two of these he cites the names of Dermestes ruficollis, Marsham, and Dermestes affinis, Marsham. Neither of these names is used in the following descriptions of the British species, for D. ruficollis, Marsham, is synonymous with the previously-described Amphicyllis globus of Paykull, and though the Stephensian type of Ag. affine is an example of the species sub- sequently described by Erichson as 4. levigatum, I do not think Marsham’s name can be adopted, his (as also Stephens’) de- scription being totally inadequate to allow a foreign author to recognize the species intended to be so designated ; nor do I think it advisable that a name now so well known as that given to this species by Erichson should be supplanted on the mere authority of a type; (there being, moreover, two other species in Stephens’ cabinet of which the type is a specimen of 4. levigatum, Erich.) Of Agathidium rufipes there is no type in the author’s cabinet ; and it is quite impossible from the description to ascertain to what species it is intended to apply.* For these reasons, therefore, I have adopted the names unanimously used by foreign writers on the genus. 1. Of A. ruficolle there are three examples in Stephens’ ca- binet ; they are all Amphicyllis globus, Payk. * Erichson, however, gives d. rufipes, Steph., as a synonym of A. alrum, Paykull; and, perhaps, on the whole, the description in the “ Illustrations” is most applicable to the species generally known by the latter name. 446 ‘ Mr. David Sharp on the 2. Of A. globus the only specimen is much mutilated, but appears to be a pale variety of 4. nigrinum, Sturm. 3. A. atrum, four examples; the type is 4. atrum, as are also two of the others; the fourth being 4. levigatum. 4. A. ferrugineum, one specimen; it is a pale variety of 4. nigrinum, Sturm. 5. A. seminulum, two specimens; the one supposed to be the type is A. marginatum, Sturm, the other being really A. seminulum. 6. A. orbiculatum, two examples, both of which are 4. leui- gatum, Erichson. 7. A. mandibulare, a single specimen; it is 4. marginatum, Sturm. 8. A. nigrinum, four specimens; the type is A. levigatum, as are also the other three examples. 9. A. affine, one specimen ; itis also 4. levigatum, Erichson. 10. 4. carbonarium, two specimens; the type has a label marked ‘‘aquaticum” attached to it; both are Chetarthria seminulum. 11. A. minutum, two specimens, both of which belong to the genus Clambus. 12. A. nanum, seven specimens, all of which are, I think, Clam- bus pubescens. Thomson in his ‘ Skandinaviens Coleoptera” has separated three species of Agathidium (A. lavigatum, A. seminulum and A. badium) from the rest of the genus, and made for them a new genus, Cyphoceble ; this, however, I have not been able to retain, for its characters are not constant in the three species that com- pose it. For instance, 4. levigatum, Erich., and A. seminulum, Linn., are considered to belong to Cyphoceble, whilst 4. atrum, Paykull, is still left in the genus 4gathidium ; and yet there is as much difference in the structure of the metasternum between levigatum and seminulum as between levigaium and atrum; on the other hand seminulum approaches atrum in the relative position of the coxze more than /evigatum does. 1. Agathidium nigripenne, Kugel. Head and thorax bright red, extremely finely and obsoletely punctured ; elytra black, rather thickly and not finely punctured, with a well marked sutural stria extending from the apex nearly to the base ; legs and antennz red, the two first joints of the club of the latter rather darker, 7th joint larger than either the 6th or British Species of Agathidium. 447 8th. with the anterior tarsi dilated, an obtuse tooth at the apex of the posterior femora, and a very minute fasciculus of hairs on the metasternum. Long. 1—1§ lin. The bright scarlet colour of its head and prothorax at once dis- tinguishes this pretty species from all its congeners. It appears to be very rare (if found at all) in the south, but is not uncommon in the north of England and in Scotland, at the oozing sap of recently-felled trees. 2. Agathidium seminulum, Linn. Above pitchy black, underside, with the legs and antenne, pitchy red; head and prothorax very finely and obsoletely punc- tured; elytra with a well marked sutural stria extending from the apex more than half-way to the base, their punctuation rather fine and close ; metasternum with the middle of the‘anterior part much depressed towards the front and very evidently separated by a well-marked margin from the posterior part. ¢. Anterior and middle tarsi dilated; apex of posterior femora truncate, and with an obtuse tooth. Long. 1 lin. Not common, but found sometimes among dead leaves and moss. I have no proof of its occurrence in the north of England or Scotland. 3. Agathidium levigatum, Erich. Black, with the sides of the thorax, legs, and antennz pitchy brown, the first two joints of the club darker; upper surface impunctate and without any sutural stria on the elytra; meta- sternum with a middle space not much depressed towards the front, and evidently separated by a margin from the posterior part. $ with the anterior and middle tarsi dilated ; metasternum with a small brush of hairs arising from a slight depression.: Long, 1 lin. Common all over the country, occurring among refuse vegetable matter and sometimes in sandpits. 4. Agathidium atrum, Payk. Black, with the sides of the thorax, legs and anteme pitchy brown, club of the latter sometimes darker and the third joint very long (about as long as the three succeeding); head and elytra rather closely and evidently, thorax very finely and obso- 448 Mr. David Sharp on the letely, punctured; sutural stria of the elytra well marked and extending more than half-way to the base; metasternum with a slightly curved transverse line. ¢ with the anterior and middle tarsi dilated at the base, posterior femora truncate at the apex and with a well-marked acute tooth; metasternum with a bunch of hairs arising from a shallow fovea. Long. 14 lin. Differs from A. seminulum in its larger size, darker colour, more evidently punctured head, longer third joint to the antenne, and the different structural characters of the ¢. Common both in England and Scotland among dead leaves and moss, occurring also now and then in sandpits. 5. Agathidium varians, Beck. Brownish-yellow, shining, disc of the thorax and elytra pitchy red, the club of the latter darker ; head with largish but faintly impressed and distant punctures, with two shallow foveze between the eyes, and an ill-defined transverse impression where the thorax meets it; thorax extremely finely and obsoletely punctured ; elytra with a sutural stria reaching quite half-way to the base, almost impunctate. g with the anterior and middle tarsi slightly dilated, and with a slender but elongate bunch of setz on the centre of the metasternum ; ? with the tarsi 4, 4,4. The ¢ some- times, though rarely, has the left mandible a little prolonged and bent at the apex. Long. 1 lin. Found sometimes in considerable numbers among refuse vege- table matter, moss, etc., both in the north and south of England and in Scotland. 6. Agathdium clypeatum, nov. sp. Piceum, prothoracis limbo, antennarum scapo, pedibusque tes- taceis; capite fere levigato, clypeo depresso; prothorace parce et obsolete, elytris parce sed evidentius punctatis, his stria suturali medium attingente. é tarsis anterioribus et intermediis dilatatis; metasterno fas- ciculo pilorum parvo instructo ; mandibula sinistra elongata, falcata. @ tarsis 4, 4, 4. Long. #—1 lin. Colour and size of A. varians, but not quite so broad and rather more acuminate behind. The underside, the basal eight joints of the antenne, and the legs and margins of the thorax, testaceous. Club British Species of Agathidium. 449 of the antenne black ; these are short and with the third joint not so long as the two succeeding. The head is very sparingly and obsoletely punctured, the punctures more evident behind the eyes. The clypeus is depressed, so as to leave the front of the head emarginate. Thorax rather narrower than the elytra, its sides faintly and sparingly, the disc extremely finely and obsoletely punctured. Elytra with the humeral angles well marked but very obtuse, sparingly and finely punctured, with a sutural stria ex- tending more than half-way. In the male the left mandible is produced into a long pointed horn. This species is perhaps the A. piceum of Erichson, but the humeral angles seem to be not so rectangular as the description of that species would lead one to expect. Moreover Erichson says nothing of the remarkable emargination of the head behind the mandibles. Found by Mr. Janson on fungi in Headly Lane, Mickleham, some years ago, and by Mr. Bold in Northumberland. Dr. Power has also captured a single specimen at Headly Lane: this was supposed to be 4. mandibulare, Sturm, a species of which I have seen no British example, and which must, I am afraid, be (at any rate for the present) erased from our lists. 7. Agathidium rotundatum, Gyll. Black, the sides of the thorax, legs and antenne pitchy ; club of the latter black, with the apex sometimes lighter; head and thorax very finely punctured, the punctuation on the disc of the latter being very obsolete; elytra with a well-marked sutural stria, extending beyond the middle, pretty thickly and finely punctured, the punctures being more evident towards the apex and sides. Of the male there are two well marked forms. In one the left mandible is armed with a straight pointed thorn-like horn reclining on the head. In the second this mandible is merely a little thickened and curved. In both of these forms the anterior and middle tarsi are slightly dilated and there is a small bunch of hairs springing from the metasternum. Long. % lin. Common in the North of England and Scotland under the ‘bark of fir stumps; the more developed form of the ¢ seems to be rare. The smallest of our British Agathidia, small males of A. marginatum alone being equally diminutive. 8. Agathidium convexum, nov, sp. Nigrum, nitidum, prothoracis limbo piceo ; antennis pedibusque rufis ; capite equaliter punctulato ; prothoracis disco obsolete, 450 Mr. David Sharp on the lateribus cum elytris parce subtiliter punctulatis, his stria suturali medium haud attingente; mesosterno subtiliter carinato. é tarsis anterioribus et intermediis dilatatis ; metasterno fas- ciculo pilorum parvo instructo. ¢ tarsis 5, 4, 4. Variat colore, interdum piceo-rufum (forte immaturum). Long. 3—4 lin. 3 Closely allied to the preceding, but larger, with a short neatly impressed sutural stria, and the club of the antennz concolorous. Head finely and pretty closely punctured. Antenne with the third joint as long as the two succeeding, the club concolorous ; thorax scarcely narrower than the elytra, sparingly and obsoletely punctured, the sides more thickly and evidently so. Elytra very convex, sparingly and faintly but evidently punctured, with a short narrow sutural stria not reaching to the middle; humeral angles asin A. rotundatum. The male sometimes has the left man- dible a little elongated and pointed. This species is about the size and has very much the appear- ance of 4. marginatum, Sturm, but differs from it in the following respects :—The elytra possess a short but evident sutural stria, and their punctuation is less close and distinct, the antenne are unicolorous, the female has the anterior tarsi five-jointed. From description it also appears to be closely allied to 4. hemorrhoum, Erich., but to be larger and with less evident punctuation (espe- cially on the elytra) than that species. Rare; most of the specimens I have seen come from Scotland, where it has been taken by Mr. Hislop. I have found it at Ran- noch in Perthshire; also taken by Dr. Power at Hampstead (on the authority of his specimens A. piceum was erroneously intro- duced into our lists). I have also found one or two other speci- mens in collections mixed up with 4. marginatum, Sturm, 9. Agathidium marginatum, Sturm. Black, very convex, with the margins of the thorax and elytra towards the apex more or less pitchy ; antennz and legs pitchy- red, with the first two joints of the club of the former darker ; elytra without any sutural stria, pretty thickly and evidently, the head and thorax very finely punctured. $ with the anterior and middle tarsi slightly dilated at the base; metasternum with a very small fasciculus of hairs; @ with tarsi 4, 4, 4. Long. ? lin. British Species of Agathidium. 451 This insect cannot be confounded with 4. levigatum, which is the only other British species without any sutural stria; the well marked humeral angles of the elytra (more nearly rectangular than in most of its allies) of 4. marginatum will at once distinguish it from that species. Rare ; occurs very sparingly both in the North and South. Found once by Mr. F. Smith in some numbers in Charlton pit. 10. Agathidium nigrinum, Sturm. Pitchy black, with the antennz, except the club, and the legs, a little lighter; head tumid behind the eyes, very closely and extremely finely punctured; thorax very transverse, very closely and obsoletely punctured, not so wide as the elytra; these with their humeral angles nearly right angles, punctuation rather fine and not close, sutural stria well marked and reaching beyond the middle. @ with the anterior and middle tarsi a little dilated, and a very minute bunch of hairs on the metasternum. Long. 14—14 lin. This fine insect is distinguished from all our other indigenous speciés, except 4. rhinoceros, by its head being tumid behind the eyes; this character, together with the well marked nearly rect- angular humeral angles of the elytra, at once separates it from A. atrum, which is the only other species that ever equals it in size. Rare ; found sometimes in sandpits in the south, at fir stumps in Scotland, and is also taken by Mr. Bold in Northumberland. 11. Agathidium rhinoceros, nov. sp. Globoso-ovatum, nigro-piceum; antennis articulis 4—8 intus subproductis ; capite prothoraceque parce punctatis, hoc Jateribus antrorsum angustatis; elytris punctulatis, humeris fere rectis; stria suturali medium attingente. é mandibula sinistra vel cornuta, vel producta, vel mutica ; tarsis anterioribus et intermediis dilatatis ; metasterno fasci- culo pilorum inconspicuo instructo. 2 tarsis 5, 4, 4. Long. 1} lin. Var.—Piceo-rufum. Pitchy black, with the legs and scape of the antennz lighter ; head with the temples tumid behind the eyes and with two broad shallow foveze behind the mandibles, together with the thorax 452 Mr. David Sharp on the British Species of Agathidium. finely punctured, the latter with its sides narrowed anteriorly, though but little rounded; elytra closely and evidently punc- tured, with the humeral angles nearly right angles. Allied to 4. nigrinum, but smaller and narrower, with the elytra more acuminate behind and the punctuation of the upper surface more distinct throughout, but more sparing on the head. Judging from Thomson’s description of 4. arcticum, it must also be closely allied to that species, but in 4. arcticum the foveze between the eyes appear to be wanting and the tarsi in the male are not dilated, nor does there appear to be any form of that sex with an armed mandible. In A. rhinoceros the development of the left mandible of the @ is more remarkable than in any other species of the genus with which I am acquainted, but it varies extremely and is generally entirely wanting, having the mandible simple, as in the other sex. Sometimes there is a long blunt horn curved backwards and springing from the mandible a little before its apex, while some- times the mandible itself is prolonged and bent upwards into a horn; there are several distinct varieties of the first-mentioned of these forms, and the second gradually shades off to the unarmed variety. This species was found by Mr. Bishop and myself in consider- able numbers under the bark of a small fir stump at Rannoch in - the beginning of August, 1864. 1 know of no other examples. With this species I conclude the list of the British Agathidia, so far as our collections at present go. There are, however, several other species, some of which at least are likely to occur in this country. Among these may be mentioned A. badium, Ziegl., in- termediate between A. levigatum and A. seminulum, pitchy in colour, with the elytra slightly punctured and with no sutural stria; A. confusum, Bris., like rotundatum, but with the punctua- tion of the elytra more marked and with the anterior tarsi in the ¢ only four-jointed ; 4. mandibulare, also like rotundatum, but impunctate ; A. arcticum, Thomson, is also not unlikely to occur in some of the northern parts of Scotland when those districts shall be properly searched. ( 453 ) XXV. Observations on some remarkable Varieties of Sterrha sacraria, Linn., with general Notes on Variation in Lepidoptera. By R. M‘Lacatan, F.L.S. [Read 4th December, 1865. ] Ar the last Meeting of this Society (see Journal of Proceedings, 6 Nov. 1865, p. 124), I exhibited some bred specimens of Sterrha sacraria, showing an extraordinary amount of variation. It has been strongly urged upon me that I should not allow these ex- amples to be distributed without leaving a suitable record of their peculiarities, and I have therefore drawn up the following notes, and have taken advantage of the occasion to make a few remarks on variation in Lepidoptera generally, especially in the British species. With respect to §. sacraria, I will first repeat what has been already recorded, viz., that on the 19th of last August, my nephew, Mr. W. J. Wilson, when walking with me in a lane near Worthing in Sussex, captured a damaged female of this insect which imme- diately commenced depositing eggs ; but she laid only seven, and I imagine that she had previously almost exhausted her stock, as her abdomen was thin and collapsed. This female example (Pl. XXIII. fig. 1) differed in nowise from the ordinary typical form and size of the species (expanse of wings 11 lines), The eggs I at once sent off to my friend the Rev. John Hellins, chap- lain of the county prison at Exeter, so well known for his success and skill in breeding Lepidoptera. One egg unfortunately was destroyed in transit, but the remaining six all hatched on the 29th of the same month. As the larva and its usual food-plants were quite unknown (excepting from an unpublished figure by Herr Carl Plétz of Greifswald, who attaches it to a species of Chamo- mile), Mr. Hellins, as is his usual custom with all larvee of Geo- metride with whose food be is unacquainted, offered the young larvee Polygonum aviculare, and they at once commenced feeding on that plant, and thrived well. On the 19th of September one larva commenced spinning, and by the 30th of that month all had changed to pupae. On the 15th of October the first imago, a female, emerged ; two other females came out on the 17th, and a fourth on the 19th; this was kept alive with the idea of pairing her, but she died on the 25th, just before the fifth example, a male, 454 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on made its appearance ; the last pupa likewise produced a male on the 28th; thus about a fortnight elapsed between the appearance of the first and last moths. The larvee were beautifully figured by Mr. W. Buckler of Emsworth, Hants (a copy of this figure is here given on P]. XXIII.), and have been most minutely described by Mr. Hellins in the “ Entomologists’ Monthly Magazine,” vol. ii. pp. 134,166. With respect to the moths produced from these eggs, I can only say that they show an extraordinary amount of variation inter se, and bear little resemblance to the parent moth, or to what has been always considered as the typical form of the species, and I have little hesitation in saying that had any one of them been taken at large, it would hardly have been referred to this species. I will describe them seriatim. No.1. ¢. (Pl. XXIII. fig. 2.) Anterior wings uniformly rosy- grey; the apical cilia rosy-pink; no discal spot; the oblique transverse line blackish, becoming grey on the inner side, and merging into rosy at its junction with the hind margin. Posterior wings pale silky grey, broadly blackish-grey on the costal and apical margins, and with a well-defined central blackish-grey line ; cilia whitish-yellow. Head and thorax greyish-ochreous, Legs and antennez dark fuscous. Expanse of wings 134 lines. No.2. @. (Pl. XXIII. fig. 3.) Anterior wings uniformly grey- ish-yellow, suffused with rosy ; the apical cilia bright rosy, bor- dered by a narrow yellow line at the base ; a small purplish discal spot; costal margin purplish for about a third of its length from the base; oblique transverse line purplish, becoming rosy inter- nally and bordered on each side by an indistinct yellowish space. Posterior wings silky whitish-grey, bordered with darker grey, and with an indistinct dark-grey central cloud; cilia very pale whitish- yellow. Head and thorax pale dirty greyish-yellow. Legs and antenne dark blackish-fuscous. Expanse of wings 12 lines. No. 3. @. (Pl. XXIII. fig. 4). Anterior wings smoky-buff ; apical cilia bright rosy, with a very narrow yellowish line at the base ; a very distinct, but small, blackish discal spot, with an indistinct smoky cloud below it ; costal margin purplish-grey at the extreme base; oblique transverse line black, becoming grey internally. Posterior wings silky whitish; the veins grey, especially at their terminations on the costal margin. Head and thorax dirty grey- ish-yellow. Legs and antenne dark blackish-fuscous. Expanse of wings 13 lines. some remarkable Varieties of Sterrha sacraria. 455 No.4. 9. (Pl. XXIII. fig. 5.) Anterior wings greyish-ochreous ; apical cilia pale rosy, with a distinct pale yellow line at the base ; discal spot distinct, elongate and blackish, with a purplish-grey cloud below it, more towards the base; costal margin purplish- grey for about a third of its length from the base; oblique trans- verse line blackish externally, purplish internally, slightly and indistinctly margined with yellowish. Posterior wings pale silky whitish, with an indication of a broad greyish central band. Head and thorax concolorous with the anterior wings. Legs and antenne fuscous. Expanse of wings 12 lines. No. 5. ¢. (PI. XXIII. fig. 6.) Anterior wings uniformly pale buff; apical cilia paler; a very distinct small black discal spot, with a slight indication of a greyish blotch below it; costal mar- gin greyish at the extreme base; oblique transverse line deep black, paler internally. Posterior wings silky whitish, slightly greyish at the costal portion of the apical margin, and in the centre. Head and thorax concolorous with the anterior wings. Legs and antennz fuscous. Expanse of wings 133 lines. No. 6. 9. (Pl. XMIII. fig. 7.) Anterior wings pale yellow, the spaces between the veins filled in with rosy- pink, hence the veins appear conspicuously yellow, with the rose colour predomi- nating on the ground; cilia bright rosy, with a narrow yellow line at the base; discal spot small and blackish; costal margin rosy for about one-half of its length from the base; oblique transverse line very broad, narrowly blackish externally, and broadly rosy internally. Posterior wings silky whitish, with a broad and well- defined central grey band. Head, collar and petagia greyish- yellow, the thorax rosy-grey in the middle. Legs and antenne pale fuscous. Expanse of wings 12 lines. This specimen, though it is apparently the most curious of all, in reality more nearly approaches a recognized form, figured by Esper (Die Schmetterlinge, pl. xxx. fig. 10, 11), under the name of sanguinaria, and which has been justly considered as a variety of sacraria by modern authors. With respect to the geographical distribution of the species, I may say that it is found over almost all the warmer portions of the old world. Linnzeus described it from an example from Barbary (Systema Nature, ed. 12, p. 863, 220), and it has been received from all parts of the African continent, from Algiers to the Cape ; ‘in India and Asia Minor it is not uncommon, but I am not sure 456 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on that it has been observed in Australia. In Europe it is common in the South, chiefly in the autumn months, and Mr. G. F. Mathew has recorded (“ Weekly Entomologist,” vol. ii. p. 83), that in October at Lisbon and Gibraltar it was the most common Lepidopterous insect. Duponchel, however, mentions June as the time of its appearance, and says “Elle se tient suspendue a lextrémité des tiges de gramen dans l'état de repose” (“¢ Lépidop- téres de France,” tom. vili. pl. 178, fig. 7). In Sweden it was recorded as long since as 1784 by Thunberg (Dissert. Ent. Insect. Suecica, pt. 1, p. 14), but I am uncertain if it has since been observed there; indeed Herrich-Schaffer (Schmett. von Europ.) doubts the correctness of Thunberg’s observation, but the latter’s description and remark, “ Pyralis sacralis—mag- nitudine et facie omnino P. forficalis,” can surely leave no uncer- tainty on this point. In England it has only been observed in the south and was unknown until 1857. Since then about twenty - specimens have been taken, all in the autumn, and often at gas- lamps; the year 1865 has produced at least half of the native examples. It has not been observed further north than London, but several have been found in the suburbs of the metropolis. Thus Africa may be considered its head-quarters, and it is almost invariably found in boxes of insects from thence. The position of the insect in repose has been remarked by several writers, and is in itself sufficient to separate Sterrha from Aspilates, in which latter genus sacraria was at one time placed. It would seem to rest head downwards, after the manner of a Crambus, with its wings crossed at a very acute angle, and in this respect it has been compared by Zeller (Isis, 1847, p. 492) to the well-known Cilia spinula, and Hellins (Ent. Mo. Mag. vol. ii. p- 135) also makes the same comparison, without being aware of Zeller’s observation. We have yet almost everything to learn of the habits of the creature. Are there two broods or only one brood in the year ? Does it hibernate in the imago state? For my part I shall not be surprised if it prove to be only single-brooded, the imago hiber- nating and not appearing after hibernation until the summer is well advanced. | I now come to the subject of the recorded variability of the species. The figures given by Esper, Duponchel, Freyer, &c., vary little, and Guenée (Phalénites, vol. ii. p. 175) says, ‘ Elle se retrouve, sans autre différence que le bord terminal un peu plus droit, en Algérie, dans l'Afrique centrale, en Abyssinie, et dans le nord de I'Inde.” I have examined thirty-two examples in the collection of the British Museum, chiefly from Africa and India, some remarkable Varieties of Sterrha sacraria. 457 and they are remarkably constant, save that two females from South Africa pertain to the form known as sanguinaria. Zeller (“ Isis,” 1847, p. 491) gives the fullest information on this point; he indicates seven forms (including the type), chiefly differing in the presence or absence of a discal point, in the colour of the transverse fascia, and (slightly) in the ground-colour, The great amount of variation exhibited in these English bred examples opens up the question of the right that the so-called species of Sterrha, allied to S. sacraria, have to be considered as distinct. S. sanguinaria, Esper, has already been disposed of as a variety of sacraria. There then remain— (1.) 8. Labdaria, Cramer (Papil. Exot. pl. 181, p.), from Surinam ; now known only from the figure, which extremely resembles S. sacraria ; the only instance, supposing the locality to be correct, of a Slerrha occurring on the American continent. (2.) S. anthophilaria, Hiibner, from South Russia; with the . anterior wings of the typical sacraria, and with the posterior wings blackish, with a central pale band. (3.) S. rosearia, Treitschke (Schmett. von Europa, vol. vi. pt. 2, p- 298), from the Ionian Islands and South Russia, figured by Duponchel (pl. 178, fig. 8), and by Herrich-Schaffer (antho- philaria, fig. 29); differing from the typical sacraria slightly in the form of the wings, with the colour of the anterior entirely rosy- grey, and with the posterior wings of anthophilaria (much re- sembling the hereinbefore described No. 1); given by Evers- mann as a variety of sacraria, and by Staudinger (‘Catalog Lepidopteren Europas,” p. 76) as perhaps a variety of the female of anthophilaria. : (4.) S. plectraria, Guenée (Phalénites, t. ti. p. 176, pl. viii. fig. 7), from Abyssinia; differing from sacraria by its larger size, more triangular wings, and different coloration, (5.) S. participata, Walker (Brit. Mus. Cat. Lep. pt. xxi. p. 1060, 7), from Namaqua Land; with reddish anterior wings, and a dark purplish-red broad oblique band, white discal spot, and pinkish-purple apical cilia. (6.) S. peculiata, Walker (loc. cit. 8), from Natal; with red- dish-ochreous anterior wings, and a pale discal spot. S. florilegaria, Zeller, Guenée, from Caffraria, I put out of the question, because Guenée states that, despite its resemblance to 8, sacraria, he is uncertain if it really pertains to the genus. After examining the six English specimens, bred from the same brood of eggs, I can come to no other conclusion than that all VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART VI.—FEB. 1866. Til 458 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on these supposed species should probably be referred to Sterrha sacraria, for most of them really approach more nearly to the typical form of that species than do most of the bred examples.* I deeply regret that Mr. Hellins was unable to obtain eggs from these examples, so as to prove if they would continue to vary in like manner, or would all or in part revert to the typical form, for I cannot but consider it a very extraordinary circum- ~ stance that not one of them should have in any degree approached to this form. ‘To what are we to attribute this variation? I ask the question, but confess that I see no satisfactory method of answering it. ‘‘ Unusual food-plant” will no doubt be sug- gested by some. I cannot admit this explanation, because I have no belief in the power of the food of the larva to produce any immediate and striking effect upon the imago; such an effect must be the work of ages, combined with previous isolation ; besides as S. sacraria is almost cosmopolitan, even the typical form, it is reasonable to suppose, is by no means confined to any one plant. I rather look to climate, but here again I do not understand the immediate effect. It may be worth remarking that these examples show precisely the peculiarities that one would expect in a delicate tropical or semi-tropical species adapting itself to a colder climate, for their texture is denser, and their general form more robust. I will now make a few general remarks on variation in Lepidop- tera, chiefly based upon observations of British species. Britain has been emphatically styled by Guenée “le pays des variétés,” and it is well known that British specimens are always desired by continental collectors. Indeed I could not help remarking, when looking over some of the Parisian collections, on the absence from or rarity in them of what we are wont to consider as the typical forms of many species. This great richness in varieties may be due, first, to our insular position; secondly, to our anomalous and variable climate; and thirdly, and perhaps chiefly, to the diversity in the geological structure of these islands. I, of course, place out of the question sexual variation, and also the so-called cases of “hermaphroditism” or “ gynandromorphism,” * This suggestion is of course based on incomplete evidence; for should the larve of these forms prove to be constantly distinct from each other and from that of S. sacraria, that would establish the right of all or any of them to be considered as species. I may add that, through the kindness of Mr. Doubleday, I have examined specimens of anthophilaria received from Dr. Staudinger ; these differ from any variety of sacraria that I have seen in the direction of the oblique fascia, which leaves the costa before the apex, whereas in sacraria it leaves the costa at its junction with the apical margin. Variation in Lepidoptera. 459 considering these latter more in the light of monstrosities ; also those cases which must come under the head of accidental varia- tion; likewise variation in the broods of species that have two generations in the year. In this country the species of the genus Selenta are familiar examples of the latter, and a more remark- able one is found on the continent in the case of Vanessa Prorsa. Local variability is therefore the chief head under which to class Variation in the imago. Many species become more or less ‘“ melanised” when oc- curring in the North of England and Scotland, the darkening becoming more marked the further we proceed northwards. Among these may be cited, Spilosoma fuliginosa, S. mendica ( $ ), Liparis monacha, Crocallis elinguaria, Hypsipetes elutata, Melanthia rubiginata, Cidaria testata, C. populata, C. suffumata, Notodonta dromedarius, Ceropacha flavicornis, C. or, C. duplaris, Acronycta rumicis, Xylophasia rurea, X. polyodon, Luperina testacea, Celena Haworthii, Rusina tenebrosa, many species of A grotis, Noctua festiva, N. neglecta, Trachea piniperda, Teniocampa gothica, T. leucographa, T. miniosa, Orthosia lota, all the genus Dianthecia, Polia chi, Aplecta nebulosa, A. tincta, A. occulta, Hadena adusta, H. dentina, Calocampa vetusta, together with many species of Tortrices and Tineina. On the contrary there are a few species which become paler the further we proceed north. As instances of this 1 may cite Fidonia piniaria, in the male of which those portions of the wing which are rich yellow in southern examples, become white in northern ones ; and Cidaria corylata, in which, in northern examples, the ochreous bands entirely disappear, and the black markings are _much less extensive, being frequently broken up into grey spots. Another instance may be cited in which locality actually changes and confuses the normal sexual variation in the colour; I allude to Hepialus humuli, in which the sexual characters in the colora- tion are generally so well marked, but in the Shetland Islands a form of this species is found with the male frequently coloured as in the female. Variation tending towards melanism, but of a peculiarly smoky character, is found in many species from the northern districts of England, especially the country about War- rington (but disappears again still further north), and this district would appear to be peculiarly adapted to the production of varieties. I may mention Lpunda viminalis, Amphidasys betularia, Hypsipetes impluviata, Tephrosia biundularia, and Cidaria russata, as instances in which this smoky form predominates in that locality; and Mr. Doubleday remarks that aberrations of Arctia caja, Spilosoma menthastri, and Abraxas grossulariata, are much more LL 2 460 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on frequent there than in other parts. It appears to me then not dif- ficult to imagine that should this district suddenly become isolated, these forms would of necessity develope into what we should very fairly call species. Many North American insects are very similar to ours; some of these are considered identical, others possessing rather wider differences are called distinct species ; surely here is a very clear case of “developmental” handywork. Again, to slightly diverge from the subject of British Lepidoptera, 1 would add that a very slight acquaintance with exotic Rhopalocera has convinced me of the probability of the developmental theory, for we find there the greatest difficulty in distinguishing between what are to be considered as species and what as varieties, because differences of locality produce forms which, though closely allied, present certain minor differential characters; no doubt these are rightly termed “species,” but still we cannot doubt their com- mon origin. In Europe the genus Erebia is an instance of this, and precisely the one in which we should expect to find such a result, because as these insects appear to require a certain low average temperature, they naturally are chiefly found in mountain districts, which from upheaval, or from sinking of the surrounding country, have become isolated, and present the most favourable conditions for gradual development. To return to my subject, I may ‘say that there are some few British species which present dimorphic forms of the female only, as in the familiar instances of Colas Edusa and Argynnis paphia. Others again present almost endless variation, without regard to locality, such as most of the species of the genus Miana, several Geometrid@, the genus Peronea, &c. In another British insect there exist two forms, which though I think without doubt of common origin, are yet entitled to rank as distinct,—I allude to Lasiocampa quercus, which on the northern moors, and in some similar isolated positions in the south, presents the form known as L. callune, which differs remarkably in habit from Z. quereus, and in which the larva differs slightly, correlated with still smaller differences in the imago. Metrocampa margaritaria, which is double-brooded in the south of England, has only one brood in Scotland, and I believe there are other analogous instances; it is also well known to all Scotch Lepidopterists that many species habitually remain there in the pupa state for two, three or four years, although in the south this would form quite the exception in the same species; this retardation of development may probably have some effect in causing variation, according to the observations of M. Bellier de la Chavignerie. I now come to consider variation in the larval condition. I have been kindly favoured by Messrs. Hellins and Buckler (than Variation in Lepidoptera. 461 whom none are more competent to speak on the subject) with the following table, which I reproduce in eatenso :— Species. Vanessa Atalanta. V, cardui. Arge Galathea, Thecla quercus. Smerinthus populi. Acherontia Atropos Sphinx convolvuli. Cherocampa } elpenor. Macroglossa } stellatarum., Zygena filipendule. Orgyia pudibunda. Trichiura crategi. Pecilocampa | populi. J Saturnia carpini. Rumia crategata. Odontopera bidentata. Crocallis elinguaria. Ennomos fuscan- taria, E, angularia. Biston hirtarius. Amphidasys betu- laria. Boarmia repandata. B, rhomboidata. Tephrosia hiundu- laria, Food-plant. Urtica dioica. Carduus. Graminacee. Quercus. Populus ; Salix, Solanum tuberosum. Convolvulus ; Impa- tiens, &c. Epilobium ; Vitis ; Fuchsia, &e. Galium, various species. Lotus corniculatus, &e. Polyphagous. Prunus spinosus ; Sa- lia; Crategus, &e. Populus; Quercus ; Salix ; Prunus; Be- tula. &e. Calluna ; Salix ; Rubus, Xe. Prunus spinosus ; Crataegus, &c. Frarinus ; Hedera Helix, &c. Salir; Prunus; Crategus, &e. Quercus; Ligustrum vulgare. Quercus ; Fagus? Salix; Quercus, &c., &e. Salix; Rubus; Cra- tegus ; low plants. Variation of Larva. Various shades of ground-tint. Various shades of, ground tint ; lines more or less distinct and bright. Ochreous or green. Various shades of warm brown ; greenish. One or two tints of Notes on Imago. C.—constant. (0, Rather varia- b’e in tints. Cc; (e Variable in green ground colour ;|tint of ground- sometimes more or less blotched with red. Brown or yellowish. Green or brown, &c. Green ; brown. Green; lead-colour ; olive- brown. Green ; yellowish- reen. Green ; yellow; brown ; white? &e. Brown; white; black; red spots, &c. Brown ; blue; grey, &e. Spots yellow or pink. Green, red spots ; brown- grey, green spots, &c. Grey; brown; white ; green. Brown; grey; green- ish ; ochreous, &c. Green; brownish-grey, &e. Brownish ; green ; (sometimes smooth). Dark brown; greyish- brown ; slaty. Greenish ; grey; brown, &c. Grey; whitish- ochreous, &c, Ligustrum ; Hedera ;; Warm brown ; reddish ; Crategus ; Ulmus ; Spartium ; Vitis ; Trifolium ; Clema- tis, &c. Larix and ? dirty white, with black markings, &c. Reddish ; blackish ; ochreous-grey. colour. C. Tolerably constant. Tolerably constant, (oF Rather variable. Cc. Permanent varieties. Variable. Variable. Variable. 462 Species. Food-plant. Gnophos obscurata. |Cistus ; Sanguisorba ; Hemithea thymiaria. Halia wavaria. Macaria nolata. M. liturata, Fidonia atomaria. Ligdia adustata. Hybernia rupi- capraria. H. leucophearia. H. progemmaria. Cheimatobia ~ } brumata. if Oporabia dilutata. | Prunus ; Acer; Cas- Larentia césiata. L, pectinitaria. Emmelesia decolovaria. } E. glchemillata. Eupithecia linariata. } E. pulchellata. E. centaureata. E. satyrata. E. castigata. E. virgaureata. E, tripunctata. E. fraxinata. Potentilla, &e. Quercus ; also low plants. Ribes. Salix; Betula. Pinus. Callunu aud Erica. Evonymus europeus. Prunus; Crategus ; Calluna; Ribes, &e. Quercus. Quercus; Betula; Ulmus; Prunus, &e. Quercus ; Pomus ; Crategus, &e. &e. taneus; Betula ; Quercus; Laurus, &e. Vaccinium vitis-idea. Galium. Seed vessels of Lychnis, Galeopsis tetrahit. Flowers and seeds of Linaria. Flowers and seeds of Digitalis. Flowers of Senecio; Solidago ; Clematis ; Sarifraga ; Reseda, &e. &e. Flowers of low plants. On any plant. Flowers of Solidago and Senecio. Flowers of Angelica. Fraxinus. Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on Variation of Larva. Greyish ; ochreous ; blackish. Green; reddish. Green ; purplish- brown. Yellowish-green ; brownish-green ; brown; purplish, c. Green; smoky, &c. Pale green; grey ; ochreous; brown; pinkish-red. Bright green; pale brown. Pale green ; blue- green; smoky. Whitish ; pale green ; olive-green ; brownish. Pale buff; blue-green ; smoky. Pale greenish-grey ; various shades of green. Green; green, covered with red markings. Full green ; rich red. Deep brown; grey, Xc. More or less green. Red or brown. Yellow; green; brown. Pale green ; green ; smoky. Whitish-green ; _full- green ; yellow; buff; with ted, purple, blackish or green markings. Green; puce; brown or red markings. Different shades of brown and grey. Red-brown; darker- _ brown. Pale-green ; full-green ; olive-brown; deep brown. Full-green ; yellow- green ; puce; uniform or with rich pattern. Notes on Imago. C.—constant. Variable. (G6 Variable. GC: Cc. Variable. Tolerably | constant. C. Variable. Mostly constant. O} et Ga “me Rather variable. Scarcely variable. C. Cc. C. Species. Enpithecia vulgata. E. expallidata. E, absinthiata. E. minutata. E, assimilata. E. nanata. E. dodoneata. E. lariciata. E. exiguata. E, sobrinata. E. pumilata. E. coronata. Hypsipetes elutata. Melanippe rivata. M. subtristata. M. galiata, M. fluctuata. Anticlea badiata. A, berberata. Chesias spartiata. Camptogramma Sluviata. Scotosia rhamnata. Cidaria russata. Variation in Lepidoptera. Food-plant. Crategus ; also various flowers. Flowers of Solidago. | Yellow; yellow-green ; full green; uniform or richly marked. Flowers of Senecio ;| Yellow-green ; puce ; piok, blackish, brown, or green markings. Achillea; Artemi- sia ; Calluna vulgaris. Ribes nigrum ; Humulus. Calluna vulgaris. Quercus. Pinus lariz. Cornus ; Crategus. Juniperus com- MUNIS. Agrimonia ; Sene- cio ; Potentilla ; Spartium, &e. Flowers of Clematis.| Various shades of green, Salix caprea. Galium, Galium. Galium. Low plants. Rosa canina. Berberis. Spartium scoparium. Low plants. Rhamnus catharticus. Polyphagous, Agrimonia ; Centaurea, &c. &c. Rose- pink ; white; green; yellow, &e. Green ; Variation of Larva. Red-brown ; olive; blackish, &c. brown ; Greenish ; rosy-pink. Green ; pink; purplish. Olive-green ; red- brown. Full green ; puce ; brown. Full green ; puce. Green ; olive; light-red ; uniform, or with red or brown pattern or lines. Clematis; Scahiosa ;|Whitish ; pinkish ; yel- low; brown; purple; uniform or with mark- ings. to] olive and brown. Various shades of brown. Green, with brown or reddish markings. Brown, &c. Pale ochreous ; dark brown ; variable markings. Brown ; green; uniform or with markings. Pale green ; purplish- Te Ochreous ; purplish- red. Dark green ; yellow, & Cc. Yellowish-green ; green- ish brown ; brown. Green ; black and yellow. out purple red line. olive ; with olive ; reddish- yellowish - green ; with or with- 463 Notes on Imago. C.—constant. C. C. Mosily constant. C. C. (6 Variable. Mostly constant. Cc. Very variable. C. CG; [on Variable. Rather variable. Cc. Cc. Variable. C. Variable. 464 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on nce Species. Cidaria silaceata. C. prunata. C. populata, Notodonta camelina. N. dictea. N. dicteoides. Xylophasia rurea. Mamestra brassicae. Gortyna flavago. Rusina tenebrosa. Grammesia trilinea. Agrotis porphyrea. Triphena orbona. T. pronubu. Noctua plecta. N. C-nigrum. N. ditrapesium. N. triangulum. N. neglecta. N. wanthographa. Teniocampa gracilis. T, cruda. Dianthecia carpophaga. D. capsincola. Epunda lichenea. tater meticulosa, Hadena chenopodii. H. contigua. H., oleracea. Food-plant. Epilobium. Rihes rubrum and grossularium. Vaccinium vitis- idea. Quercus ; Fagus ; Corylus. Salix caprea, &c. Betula. Graminacee. Poly phagous. In stems of Cnicus ; Arctia ; Verbascum ,; Digitalis, &e. Low plants. Plantago. Calluna and Erica. Polyphagous. Roots of Grami- nacee, &c. Low plants. Low plants. Various. Various. Erica and Salix caprea. Graminacee, &c. Salix; Rubus. Chiefly Quercus. Seeds of Silene inflata. Seeds of Silene and Lychnis. Variation of Larva, Green ; pinkish-green. Brown; grey; pale green. Brown ; reddish-green, &e. Green ; lilac; reddish. Green ; brown. Green ; purple. Various tints of och- reous, reddish, and dark brown. Green ; grey; brown. Purplish-grey ; yellow- ish flesh-colour. Rich red ; reddish- brown ; brown. Dark grey ; ochreous. Dark green; buff; red. Many tints of grey and brown. Green ; olive-green ; various shades of brown. Various shades of brown; ochreous ; green, Grey ; brown. Various tints of ochre- - ons, red and brown. Various tints of ochre- ous, red] and brown. Orange ; brown; green. Many tints of buff and brown, Green ; red-brown. Green; black; brown ; puce. Many tints of buff and ochreous. Buff; brownish; greenish. Senecio vulgaris, &c.| Brown ; green; grey. Polyphagous. Chenopodium and Atriplea. Salix, Low plants. Green ; brown; ochreous. Green; brown; with or without red lines. Green ; bright red. Green ; brown. ' | , Notes on Lmago. C.—constant. Variable. C. Mostly constant. C. C | C. | Variable. | | / C. C. (& Rather variable. Cc: Variable. Variable. C. C. C. Cs Variable. Variable. Rather variable. Mostly constant. Variable. Variation in Lepidoptera. 465 Notes on Imago. C.—constant. Species. Food-plant. Variation of Larva, Hadena pisi. |Erica; Spartium ;} Dark-green ; crimson. Rather Salix ; Pteris, &c. ; variable. perbaps polypha- gous. Cucullia chamo- Anthemis. Pink ; green; yellow. C. mille. C, lychnitis. Verbascum nigrum Green ; yellow. C. and lychnitis. Heliothis marginata.| Ononis; Betula. Green; red; smoky. C. H, peltigera. Hyoscyamus ; Green; red ; uniform C. Ononis. or with pattern. Stilbia anomala. Graminacee. Green ; brown. C. Mr. Hellins then adds a list of species which, though very variable in the imago state, are constant or nearly constant in the larval. Among these may be cited Arctia caja, Hadena protea, Teniocampa instabilis, Anchoscelis lunosa, Apamea oculea, &c. A glance at the foregoing table will show that often when the imago is most constant, the larva shows the greatest tendency to variation ; this is especially marked in the species of the genus Eupithecia. To what then are we to attribute this variability in the larva? I have before expressed my doubt as to the effect of food in causing variation in the imago; not so, however, in the larva, for I believe that variability in the latter is caused in a great measure, but indirectly, by food, and that the object of such variation is, as Mr. Hellins has justly surmised in his letters to me, mimicry. Not that the larva of one species mimics that of another, but rather the plant on which it subsists. In fact the prevailing colours of the majority of Lepidopterous larve are green and brown, and admirably assimilate to those of the foliage and stems of plants and shrubs. This is especially noticeable in the majority of the larvee of Geometride, which are not strictly nocturnal feeders as are most of the Noctu@, which retire to some place of congealment during the day, when they would be the most liable to the attacks of birds. The larvae of many species of the genus Lupithecia show this power of mimicry to very great advantage. These are, for the most part, flower feeders, and have evidently the power of assuming the same colour as that of the flowers on which they feed. Some five years since I, one autumn, collected about a hundred larve of Eupithecia absin- thiata, and I remarked that when found on Senecio Jacobea, they 466 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on were yellowish, when on Centaurea nigra reddish, when on Matri- caria whitish, &c.; afterwards I placed them all on Senecio Jacobea, they being then nearly full grown. I did not find that they showed a tendency to become yellowish ; and this proved to my mind, first, that it was necessary for the larva to have fed on the one kind of flower from the egg in order to acquire this power of mimicry, and secondly, that the colour of the larva could not be caused by the food showing through the somewhat transparent integuments. Hence, it appears that the colours of Lepidopterous larvee are in a great measure adapted to save them from being carried off by birds and other enemies, and it is reasonable to suppose that in those cases, where the colours do not ‘assimilate with, or are directly opposed to, those of the food-plant, some other circum- stances may exist, rendering such mimicry unnecessary. The larvee of most internal feeders, which are not greatly exposed to external enemies, show little variation, either in particular species or as a whole. I conclude, therefore, that food has an immediate though in- direct effect in producing variation in the larva, but that in the imago it possesses this attribute in a very small degree. In the latter we must look to other and more subtle causes. That mimicry does not exist in the imago to the same extent as in the larva appears evident, but I cannot believe that Nature is ever aimlessly prodigal, and, no doubt, the causes of variability in the imago-state are as potent as in the larva-state, but at present they are, for the most part, beyond our comprehension. With respect to range of variation I will say but little. Tt appears to me that ordinarily varieties have a tendency to revert to what we consider as the type, but that under certain cir- cumstances, not only will they not so revert, but that the diver- gence will gradually become wider, until eventually they develope into what is considered as a species. 1 do not say that I am pre- pared to accept the ‘development theory ” to the full extent to which some would apply it; but that it is a reasonable way of accounting for phenomena, which otherwise cannot be satisfac- torily settled, must, I think, be evident to all who endeavour to rid themselves of hereditary prejudices. ‘The acceptation, partial or entire, of this theory is not so disastrous as some would appear to consider it. The most inveterate describer of new species need not fear that the darling object of his existence is useless and aimless if well done, for the process of development is of necessity so immeasurably slow, that to all intents and purposes, a faithful description of a new “ form” or “species” is as useful Variation in Lepidoptera. 467 to a naturalist holding the one view as to another who prefers to adhere to old ideas; it is only that the one looks upon the origin of that species in a different light from the other. I must ask my readers to bear with me for one moment whilst I diverge from the Lepidoptera to refer to another Order to which I have paid more particular attention—the Neuroptera. It is a fact that cannot be too strongly insisted upon, that in this Order, the secondary or auxiliary sexual appendages present almost infallible characters for the separation of species. Were these characters perfectly infallible, were there not some forms in a tran- sitional or variable condition, this would, I consider, be fatal to the ‘development ” theory, but such forms or species do exist, and, for instances, I refer to De Selys Longchamps and Hagen’s ** Monographie des Gomphines,” in which it is shown that in two species at least, Gomphus (Onycogomphus) forcipatus (pp. 28-40, pl. ii.) and Cordulegaster annulatus (pp. 333-837, pl. xvii.), the anal appendices present rather remarkable variations in form accord- ing to locality, and, perhaps, correlated with certain differences in coloration. I have no doubt that other instances could be cited, and I believe that even in the T’richoptera parallel cases may be found. In bringing these notes to a close I must glance at a very elaborate paper “ On phytophagic Varieties and phytophagic Species,” by Mr. Benj. D. Walsh, of Rock Island, Illinois (a writer thoroughly imbued with Darwinian views), published in the Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Philadelphia, vol. 1. pp. 403-430. In this paper he classes variation by food under twelve different heads (pp. 427-428), which are. too lengthy to reproduce here. So far as I understand him, Mr. Walsh is also opposed to the notion of food being an immediate cause of varia- tion’in the imago, but he argues that in some insects there are cer- tain more or less constant forms attached to particular plants, and as a rule breeding only inter se, which are very closely allied, and which he considers as only phytophagic species, but, nevertheless, quite worthy to be considered and named as distinct. Under this rule would come many of the British species of Micro-Lepi- doptera,* and I fancy that had Mr. Walsh been extensively ac- * In the genera Gelechia, Elachista, Lithocolletis, Nepticula, &c., there are certain groups of closely-allied species, each of which apparently feeds exclu- sively on different species of the same family of plants. In Lithocolletis this is especially noticeable in the group of species (L. pomifoliella and its allies) attached to the fruit-bearing Rosacee. On the contrary, we often see totally distinct species of one genus living side by side in the same leaf. I wish to 468 Mr. R. M‘Lachlan’s Observations on Lepidoptera. quainted with the American species of this group, he would have laid more stress on it to illustrate his views. In taking leave of this subject, I tender my sincere thanks to Mr. Hellins and Mr. Buckler for their kindness in assisting me with notes. be distinctly understood that I am directly opposed to the view held by some Entomologists, that these cognate forms are immediately occasioned by the difference of the food-plant, though they may have originated from that cause, and are thus what Mr. Walsh terms ‘‘ pbytophagie species.”’ EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXIII. Fig. 1. Sterrha sacraria, 9; the parent of the following :— la. Larvee of S. sacraria ; on Polugonwm aviculare. 2—7, Varieties of S. sacraria, bred from eggs laid by fig. 1. [Unfor- tunately, Art has failed to re-produce the beauty of Nature. ] ( 469 ) XXVI. Description of Papilio Godeffroyi, n. sp. By Geore Semper, [Read 4th December, 1865.] Papilio Godeffroyi. (Plate XXIV. fig. 1, 3; fig. 2, 9). Pap. alis caudatis; $ nigro-fuscis ; anticis striga apicali albido- sulphurea ; posticis supra fascia virescenti-flavida, subtus lunulis septem cceruleis, maculisque submarginalibus rufes- centibus; 2 fuscis, fascia anticis albido-sulphurea, posticis virescenti-flavida, subtus omnibus alba, lunulis septem coeruleis, alterisque submarginalibus rufis. Exp. al. g 9895); 9 ¢99"Met 116"2; Hab. Upolu, Samoa Islands. Male.— Upperside glossy black ; fore-ning with a short curved band of six yellowish spots near the apex, and irrorated with some yellowish atoms in the discoidal cell and along the exterior margin ; hind-ning tailed, with a transverse outwardly-sinuated yellowish-green fascia, irrorated with black atoms, and connected at the anal angle with an ill-defined red-brown lunule; the space between the sinuous band and the exterior margin is irrorated with some bluish atoms. Underside black ; fore-wing having the curved band paler and irrorated near the posterior angle with bluish-white atoms; Aind-nwing with a fascia of seven lunules of bluish atoms, and a series of seven pale rufous lunules parallel to the exterior margin, the one at the anal angle touching the bluish fascia ; indentations on the upperside pale-yellowish, on the under- side white. Female,— Upperside dark-brown ; fore-wing witha transverse fascia of yellowish spots from the anterior to the posterior margin, the six first like those of the male, but larger, the other five parallel to the exterior margin ; irrorated along the exterior margin and in the discoidal cell with yellowish atoms ; hind-ning tailed, with a transverse outwardly-sinuated yellowish-green fascia, margined outwardly by a series of seven lunules of bluish atoms, the fifth and sixth from the anterior margin being larger than the others; near the exterior margin is a series of seven red lunules, the first and second from the anterior margin being indicated only by some 470 Mr. G. Semper’s Description of Papilio Godeffroyi. red atoms; the one at the anal angle touching the seventh bluish lunule. Underside dark brown ; fore-wing as above, except the colour, the fascia and irrorations being white; hind-wing with a small transverse fascia of whitish spots, margined outwardly by a series of seven bluish lunules; with seven red lunules disposed as on the upperside, but larger ; indentations on both sides white. In the collections of M. Godeffroy and Geo. Semper. Recently discovered by Dr. Greffe, by whom three specimens have been sent to M. Godeffroy, to whom I have dedicated this beautiful species in acknowledgment of his great zeal for the advancement of science, especially through the exploration of the Pacific Islands. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXIV. Fig. 1. Papilio Godeffroyi, $, upper and under side. M) ”? a” a oD ” i 4 Craze) XXVII. New Genera and Species of Gallerucide. By J, 5. Bary, F.L.S. [Read 6th Nov. 1865, 5th Feb, 1866.] Genus SypuaAxta. Corpus robustum, ovatum, postice paullo ampliatum, valde con- vexum, sericeo-pubescens. Caput modice exsertum, facie perpendiculari; antennis corporis dimidio zqualibus, robus- tis, vix fusiformibus, articulis cylindricis, primo a basi ad apicem incrassato, curvato, secundo brevi, tertio quam primo longiori, quarto quam tertio paullo breviori, czteris ad apicem brevioribus et inter se fere equalibus. Thorax trans- versus, transversim excavatus. LElytra ovalia, confuse punc- tata. Pedes robusti; covis anticis erectis, contiguis ; femori- bus posticis non incrassatis ; tibiis omnibus apice muticis; tarsorum posticorum articulo basali duobus sequentibus con- junctis vix breviori; wunguiculis muticis, basi incrassatis. Prosternum fere obsoletum. Type, Syphaxia (Monocesta) spectanda, Clark. Syphaxia may be known from Monocesta by its unarmed ungui- culi and its much shorter antennze ; and the body is shorter and more convex, as well as more regularly ovate, than in the majority of the species of Monocesta. Sp. 1. Syphaxia spectanda, Clark. Monocesta spectanda, Clark, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1865, p. 315. In the Rev. H. Clark’s specimens, the antenna are wanting ; in the specimen before me (which also came from Cayenne) the antennze are nigro-fuscous, with the exception of the bases of the four lower joints, which are flavous. Genus Cuorina. Corpus elongatum, parallelum, convexum, sericeo-pubescens. Caput exsertum, facie perpendiculari; an/ennis modice ro- bustis, corporis longitudine brevioribus, filiformibus, apicem versus vix incrassatis, articulis cylindricis, primo a basi ad apicem incrassato, curvato, secundo brevi, tertio elongato, quatuor sequentibus longitudine perparum decrescentibus, 4:72 Mr. J.S. Baly’s New Genera Thorax transversus, lateribus medio angulatis, disco trans- versim depresso. J¢lytra thorace paullo latiora, parallela, subcylindrica, confuse punctata. Pedes subelongati, robusti ; coxis anticis erectis, contiguis; femoribus posticis non in- crassatis ; tibiis omnibus apice muticis; tarsorum posticorum articulo basali’ duobus_ sequentibus longitudine equali; unguiculis muticis, basi incrassatis. Prosternum fere obso- letum. Type, Chorina (Monocesta) cincta, Clark. Chorina may be distinguished from Syphazia by the longer and rather more slender antennw and by its parallel body; from Monocesta (in which genus the two species have been placed by Mr. Clark) the simple unguiculi at once separate it; the body is also Mr. more parallel than in Monocesta, approaching in that respect Clark’s very natural genus Dircema. Sp. 1. Chorina cincta, Clark. Monocesta cincta, Clark, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1865, p. 315. Sp. 2. Chorina obliquenotata, Clark. Monocesta obliquenotata, Clark, loc. cit. Genus Ceroroma, Erichson. Sectio 1. Thorax profunde sulcatus, sulco plus minusve quadri- sinualo ; elytra valde costata. 1. Cerotoma DeGandei. Nigra, nitida, pedibus flavis (antennze desunt); epistomate rude sed subremote punctato, medio longitudinaliter cari- nato, vertice subcrebre punctato ; thorace punctato, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco quadrisinuato ; elytris valde cos- tatis, costis duabus internis fere obsoletis, interspatiis for- titer bifariam punctatis, apicem versus obsolete transversim costulatis, flavo-fulvis, fascia laia subapicali nigra. (Foem.) Long. 44 lin. Hab. Banks of Napo, Ecuador. 2. Cerotoma heterocera. Pallide flava, nitida; antennis infuscatis aut piceis, articulis quatuor vel quinque ultimis albidis ; capite thoraceque pal- lide rufo-piceis, illo vertice rugoso-punctato profunde uni- foveolato, hoc subcrebre punctato profunde transver- sim sulcato, sulco quadrisinuato, lateribus flavo-limbatis ; and Species of Gallerucide. . 473 elytris fusco-violaceis aut pallide violaceo-piceis, valde cos- tatis, costis duabus interioribus minus distinctis. A. Elytrorum limbo laterali maculisque quaftuor, duabus prope medium, duabus ante apicem positis, flavis. B. Elytrorum limbo exteriori, fascia prope medium plus minusve distincta, maculis duabus subapicalibus, costisque nonnullis flavis. C. Corpore fulvo, elytris immaculatis. Mas.—Capite inter oculos lamina bilobaté armato, lobis ad apicem deorsum curvatis, facie inter Jaminam et antennarum insertiones modice concava, levi; epistomate bisexcavato, utrinque spina subacuta curvaté armato; antennarum arti- culis tertio quartoque incrassatis, compressis, conjunctim emarginatis, tribus basalibus flavis, nigro-maculatis. Foem.—Capite mutico; epistomate rude rugoso, medio longitu- dinaliter elevato; antennis simplicibus. Long. 4 lin. Hab. Amazons. In the Rev. H. Clark’s collection, some specimens of this species bear the name of “ heterocera, Illig.”” I have retained the name, although I cannot find any reference to Illiger’s description. As may be seen above, this insect varies greatly in coloration ; it is somewhat larger and decidedly more robust than any of the other species described in the present paper. 3. Cerotoma congener. Pallide flavo-fusca, nitida, supra pallide picea; vertice rugoso, profunde unifoveolato; thorace distincte punctato, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco quadrisinuato; elytris fortiter punctatis, valde costatis, costis duabus interioribus fere obsoletis, interspatiis irregulariter transversim costulatis, limbo exteriori costisque nonnullis flavis. Mas.—Capite inter oculos lamina bilobatd instructo, °lobis acutis, ad apicem vix deflexis ; epistomate medio longitudi- naliter carinato, utrinque profunde excavato, ad utrumque Jatus spina curvata subacut4é armato; antennarum articulis tertio quartoque incrassatis et compressis, conjunctim emar- ginatis, quatuor basalibus flavis, primo ad apicem secundo tertioque dorso nigris, quinto ad octavum piceis, tribus sequentibus sordide albidis, ultimo apice nigro, Long. 3 lin. Hab. Amazons. VOL. II, THIRD SERIES, PART VI.—-FEB. 1866. MM 474 Mr. J. S. Baly’s New Genera Similar in form to, but smaller than, C. helerocera ; epistome in the ¢ with the lobes of the facial plate subacute, scarcely de- flexed. 7 4, Cerotoma excavata. Pallide fusca aut picea, nitida; pedibus pallide flavis, femori- bus dorso, posticis apice, tibiis extus, posticis totis, tarsisque fuscis; thorace albo-flavo, basi interdum longitudinaliter cana - liculato, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco quadrisinuato ; capite elytrisque piceis, his valde costatis, interspatiis fortiter punctatis, irregulariter transversim costulatis, basi extremé, fascia lata prope medium apiceque flavis; abdominis seg- mentis aut flavis aut flavo-marginatis. Mas.—Capite inter oculos in lamina bilobaté producto, lobis obtusis, apice deflexis, facie supra laminam profunde exca- vata; epistomate medio longitudinaliter carinato, utrinque profunde excavato, utroque latere spina curvata apice subacuta; antennis pallide flavis, articulis intermediis infus- catis, tertio quartoque incrassatis et compressis, conjunctim excavatis. Feem.— Epistomate rude rugoso, medio longitudinaliter carinato ; antennarum articulis tertio quartoque longitudine equalibus, sexto quam quinto distincte breviori. Long. 3—38 lin. Hab. Nauta, Upper Amazons. Narrower than C. transversofasciata ; similar in pattern, but paler; front and epistome very deeply excavated, the latter only bispinose. 5. Cerotoma transversofasciata. Flavo-alba, nitida; pectore abdomineque nigris, hujus seg- mentis flavo-marginatis; capite, scutello elytrisque nigro- piceis; his valde costatis, interspatiis bifariam punctatis, irregulariter transversim costulatis, fascid apicali alterAque prope medium flavo-albis; thorace profunde transversim sulcato, sulco quadriflexuoso; antennarum articulis quatuor ultimis sordide albidis, ultimo apice nigro; tibiis tarsisque plus minusve infuscatis, ° Mas.—Capite inter oculos lamina bilobata instructo, lobis obtusis, apice deflexis; epistomate quadrispinoso ; anten- narum articulis tribus basalibus flavis nigro-maculatis, tertio quartoque incrassatis et compressis, conjunctim emarginatis. Pe eee weer and Species of Gallerucide. 475 Fem. —Epistomate rugoso, medio longitudinaliter carinato. Long. 4 lin. Hab. S. Paulo, Upper Amazons. C. transversofasciata, although equally long, is much narrower than C. heterocera; the male is known by the four spines (instead of two) on the epistome ; in addition to the two lateral ones, which are broad and compressed with obtuse apices, there are two ‘others, subacute, placed on the anterior edge of the epistome. 6. Cerotoma limbifera. Flava, nitida; antennis piceis, articulis quatuor ultimis flavo- albidis; capite thoraceque rufo-testaceis; illo vertice unifoveo- lato, epistomate ruguloso, medio elevato-carinato ; hoc plus minusve distincte punctato, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco obsolete quadrisinuato; elytris valde costatis, interspa- tiis bifariam punctatis, irregulariter transversim costulatis, violaceo-piceis, rufo-testaceo-limbatis. (Jam.) Long. 3— 33 lin. Hab. Amazons. Narrower in form than C. transversofasciata, smaller and dif- ferently coloured ; third and three following joints of the antennz equal in length. 7. Cerotoma Amazona. Sordide flava, nitida, pedibus fulvis; capite thoraceque pallide piceis; illo vertice minus profunde unifoveolato, epistomate tumido, levi, basi obsolete carinato, antennarum articulis quinque ultimis albidis, ultimo apice nigro; hoc levi, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco distincte quadrisinuato; elytris valde costatis, costis duabus interioribus minus elevatis, interspatiis fortiter punctatis, transversim costulatis, pallide violaceo-piceis, limbo marginali, fascia transversa prope medium positaé extus abbreviataé, maculadque rotundata sub- apicali flavis. (/cem.) Long. 3 lin. Hab. Nauta, Upper Amazons. Rather narrower than C, heterocera, smaller, and separated from that species by the smooth epistome. 8. Cerotoma contubernalis. Flava, nitida; antennarum articulo ultimo apice nigro; capite pallide piceo, vertice profunde unifoveolato, subrugoso ; epi- M M 2 476 Mr. J. S. Baly’s New Genera stomate rude rugoso, medio longitudinaliter carinato ; thorace subcrebre punciato, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco quadrisinuato ; elytris fortiter punctatis, valde costatis, costis duabus internis fere obsoletis, interspatiis minus distincte transversim costulatis, violaceo-piceis, limbo exteriori fascia- que prope medium extus abbreviata, flavis. (/cem.) Long. 3 lin. Hab. Amazons. Broader and rather more convex above than C. pulchra; the fifth joint of the antenne very slightly shorter than the fourth. 9. Cerotoma pulchra. Flava, nitida; antennarum articulis intermediis piceis, ultimo apice nigro; capite thoraceque rufo-testaceis ; illo vertice profunde foveolato, sparse punctato, epistomate medio longi- tudinaliter carinato, rude sed minus crebre punctato; hoc ad latera flavo-marginato, distincte punctato, profunde trans- versim sulcato, sulco quadrisinuato ; elytris piceo-violaceis, valde costatis, interspatiis bifariam punctatis, irregulariter transversim costulatis, limbo exteriori, fascia lata prope medium, maculaque transversa subapicali limbo apicali af- fixa, flavis. (cem.) Var. A. Elytris pallide flavis, fascié basali plagaque sub- apicali pallide rufo-piceis. Long. 33 lin. Hab. Amazons. The coarsely punctured epistome will at once separate this species from C. Amazona. 10. Cerotoma perplexa. Sordide flava, nitida, tibiis ad apicem tarsisque obscurioribus, supra piceo-violacea ; antennis crassiusculis, nigris, articulis quatuor basalibus subtus fulvis, quatuor ultimis albidis, secundo brevissimo, tertio et tribus sequentibus longi- tudine aqualibus ; epistomate rugoso, medio longitudinaliter carinato; vertice subremote punctato, minus profunde unifo- veolato; thorace subremote punctato, profunde transversim sulcato, sulco distincte quadrisinuato; elytris fortiter punctatis, valde costatis, cost prim& minus distincta, interspatiis irregu- lariter transversim costulatis. Long. 33 lin. Hab, Amazons. and Species of Gallerucide. 477 Antenne rather thicker than in either of the two preceding species ; the third and three following joints equal in length. 11. Cerotoma alternata. Flava, nitida; ore, vertice, pectore scutelloque piceis; antennis nigro-piceis, articulis octavo apice tribusque ultimis albidis, ultimo apice nigro, tertio quam quarto distincte longiori; vertice minus profunde unifoveolato; epistomate inequaliter ruguloso, medio longitudinaliter carinato; thorace leevi, _profunde transversim suleato, sulco sat distincte quadrisinu- ato; elytris minus profunde punctatis, costatis, costis alternis minus distinctis, interspatiis planis, pallide violaceo-piceis, plaga apicali costisque alternis flavis. (Faem.) Long. 3 lin. Hab. Amazons. Smaller than, but similar in form to, C. heterocera; the third, fourth and fifth joints of the antenne gradually decreasing in length. Sectio II. Thorax impressus vel sulcatus, sulco nunquam quadri- sinuato ; elytrorum coste vel obsolete vel indistincte. 12. Cerotoma Deyrollei. Nigra ; capite, thorace, scutello, abdomineque castaneis ; pedibus flavo-fulvis ; antennis, elytrorumque limbo inflexo et fasciis tribus (harum prima basali, punctum humerale nigrum in- cludente, secunda prope medium, tertia apicali) flavis; epi- stomate subremote punctato, basi longitudinaliter carinato ; thorace tenuiter subcrebre punctato, disco profunde trans- versim bifoveolato. (F'aem.) Long. 2# lin. Hab. Magdalena River, Columbia. 13. Cerotoma quadripustulata. Nigra, nitida; capite, thorace scutelloque castaneis; thorace tenuiter punctato, arcuatim transversim sulcato, sulco utrin- que profundius impresso; pedibus antennisque flavis, his extrorsum fuscis; elytris tenuiter punctatis, utrisque fascia ante medium antice emarginata utrinque abbreviata, macu- J4que subrotundata infra medium, flavis. Mas.—Facie infra antennarum insertionem profunde excavata 5 antennis simplicibus. 478 Mr. J. S. Baly’s New Genera, &c. Foem.—Facie non excavata ; epistomate convexo, remote punc- tato, basi obsolete carinato. Long. 23 lin. Hab. Guatemala, Mexico. 14. Cerotoma Erichsont. Nigra, nitida; pedibus, capite thoraceque flavis, vertice pallide castaneo ; thorace vix transverso, tenuissime punctato, disco obsolete transversim impresso, vitta lata media, basi et apice abbreviata, medio fulvo-lineata, nigro-piceo; elytris subfor- titer punctatis, utrisque limbo inflexo, plaga humerali, fascia transversa4 centrali, margine apicali, vittaque obliqua sub- apicali, flavis. Mas.—Epistomate pube concolori dense vestito, basi trans- versim elevato; antennarum articulo tertio elongato, com- presso, a basi apicem versus dilatato, apice extus profunde emarginato, quarto modice elongato, apice in spina acuta prolongato. Long. 22 lin. Hab. Nauta, Upper Amazons; Peru. 15. Cerotoma Salvinii. Nigra, nitida; capite (ore excepto) thoraceque pallide castaneis ; hoe transverso, lateribus obtuse angulato, dorso subremote punctato, utrinque leviter impresso; pedibus antennisque flavis; elytris minute squamoso-reticulatis, subfortiter punc- tatis, utrisque limbo laterali, plaga oblonga subbasali, fasciis- que duabus (una media, altera subapical flexuos4) flavis. Var. A. Elytrorum signaturis fere obsoletis. Mas.—Capite inter oculos Jamina bilobaté armato; facie infra laminam transversim concava, utrinque ad latus creta trans- versa elevata instructa, margine’ apicali spinis duabus cur- vatis armatad; antennarum articulo tertio elongato, com- presso, a basi apicem versus incrassato, apice profunde emarginato et spina acuta armato, quarto brevi, vix dilatato, apice spina acuta transversa armato. Fom.—Capite mutico; epistomate nigro-piceo, rugoso, basi tumido. Long. 2% lin. Hab. Panama. Collected by Mr. Salvin. XXVIII. Descriptions of new Hesperide. By W. C, Hzwitson, F.L.S., F.Z.S. {Read 6th November, 1865, lst January, 5th February, 1866. ] Fam. HESPERID. Genus Pyrruoryea, Hiibner, Westwood. 1. Pyrrhopyga Sela. Pyrrhopyga Pityusa g, Hewitson, Ex. But. vol. ii. pl. 60. 2. Pyrrhopyga Azeta. Alis atris, albo czruleoque fasciatis; anticis maculis tribus fenestratis ; posticis fasciis tribus. Upperside, male, black. Anterior wing with two transverse bands of white near the base ; two longitudinal bands parallel to the inner margin, three spots in an oblique band beyond the middle, and a small spot nearer the apex, all pale blue ; a central trifid spot, a small spot (part of the oblique band of blue spots), and a quintifid band near the apex, all transparent white. Pos- terior wing with three oblique transverse bands: the first and second white, the outer band blue. The abdomen banded with white. Underside as above, except that the outer band of the posterior wing is much broader near the costal margin, and is there divided into three. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Amazon (St. Paulo). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Resembles nearly Erycides Papias. 3. Pyrrhopyga Ahira. Alis atris, albo ceruleoque fasciatis ; anticis fascia angulari; .posticis fascia lata, Upperside, male, black. Anterior wing with two transverse bands of white near the base; a broad trifid band of silver-blue, at first longitudinal and parallel to the inner margin, afterwards at a right angle with the same, and towards the apex three indistinct 480 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions spots of the same colour. Posterior wing crossed near the base by a band of white, and at the middle by a broad band of pale blue. The abdomen banded with white. Underside as above, except that the longitudinal portion of the band of the anterior wing is absent. Exp. 2.2, inches. Hab. Amazon (Para). In the Collection of W. C, Hewitson. 4. Pyrhopyga Zonara. Alis atris, albo czruleoque fasciatis; anticis maculis tribus fenestratis ; posticis fasciis duabus. Upperside, male, black. Anterior. wing with a central trifid band, a bifid spot beyond it, and a quadrifid spot near the apex, transparent white; a transverse band of white near the base, a similar band of blue, a linear spot near it, a similar spot beyond the middle, and a linear band parallel to the outer margin, also pale blue. Posterior wing with a band of white parallel to the inner margin, a short band of blue beyond the middle, and two minute spots of the same colour near the anal angle. The ab- domen banded with white. Underside as above, except that there are two additional blue spots near the apex of the posterior wing. Exp. 2.3, inches. Hab. Amazon. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very closely allied to P. Vulcanus, but of different form, and with two bands only instead of four on the posterior wing. The body very large. 5. Pyrrhopyga Oneka. Alis nigris, fascié communi ochracea ; anticis fascia apicali. Upperside dark brown. Both wings crossed near the middle by a band of ochreous spots. Anterior wing with an apical band of similar spots. Underside as above, except that the posterior wing has an ochreous spot near the base. Head, palpi and anus scarlet. Exp. 2,35 inches. In the Collection of the British Muscum. Near.to P. Xantippe. ‘of new Hesperide. 481 6. Pyrrhopyga Aspitha. Alis atris, ad basin ferrugineis; anticis macula tripartita fenes- trata; posticis dentatis, fimbria alba. Upperside, male, dark brown. The body, a transverse band near the base of the anterior wing, and a broader band on the posterior wing, rufous-yellow; a triangular trifid band of trans- parent white at the middle, the outer margin of the posterior wing dentated and fringed with white. The abdomen banded with white. Underside as above, but without the bands of hair. The female differs from the male in being of a darker rufous colour and in having more of the hair, and a minute white spot (sometimes two) on the costal margin near the apex. _ Exp. 159; inch. Hab. Amazon (Para and St. Paulo). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Resembles P. Coritus of Cramer. 7. Pyrrhopyga Thelersa. Alis ceruleo-atris, ad basin ferrugineis ; anticis macula tripar- tita fenestrata, Upperside dark blue; the body and base of both wings covered with bright rufous hair. Anterior wing with a large trifid central spot of transparent white; the outer margin of the posterior wing not dentated, and not fringed with white. The abdomen banded with white. Poort green-blue, with a few rufous hairs at the base. Exp. 23 inches. Hab. Amazon (St. Paulo). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. This may be a variety of P. Aspitha. It is, however, much larger, of a different colour, and without the white fringe to the posterior wing. 8. Pyrrhopyga Pedaia. Alis viridi-atris ; anticis macula tripartita fenestrata ; capite anoque sanguineis. Upperside, male, body and wings blue-black. The forehead, the palpi, the femora of the anterior legs and the anus scarlet. Anterior wing with a central trifid spot of transparent white. Posterior wing fringed with white. 482 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions Exp. 2-4 inches. Hab. Amazon (Ega). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Scarcely differs, except in the antenna, from Erycides Arinas of Cramer. 9. Pyrrhopyga Hadora. Alis viridi-atris ; anticis macula tripartita fenestrata. Upperside, male and female, blue-black, The neck scarlet ; the palpi and femora white. Anterior wing with a central trifid spot of transparent white. Posterior wing fringed with white. Exp. 2.2, inches. Hab. Amazon (Para and Ega). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very closely allied to P. Pedaia. There is a variety of the female of this species in which the posterior wing is dentated. 10. Pyrrhopyga Passova. Alis viridi-atris ; posticis macula anali sanguinea. Upperside, male and female, green-black. The forehead, palpi, anus, and anal angle of the posterior wing, scarlet. Underside with the base of both wings broadly white. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Amazon (Ega) and Cayenne. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Differs from P. Meenas only in having the anal angle of the posterior wing more lobed, and scarlet. 11. Pyrrhopyga Gazera. Alis atris; posticis marginibus czeruleis. Upperside, male, black. The head, the palpi and anus scarlet. Anterior wing glossed with green on the costal margin. Posterior wing with a marginal band of glossy blue, the margin broadly fringed with white. Underside blue-black, with black hair near the base of both wings. Exp. 15%, inch. Hab. Amazon (St. Paulo). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. of new Hesperide. — 483 12. Pyrrhopyga Aziza. Alis atris ; posticis marginibus griseo-ceruleis, infra dimidio basali albo. Upperside black. The head, palpi and anus scarlet. Posterior wing with the outer margin broadly bordered with pale blue, divided by the nervures. Underside, posterior wing with more than the basal half (the base itself excepted) white. Exp. 1,9; inch. Hab. New Granada. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 13. Pyrrhopyga Garata. Alis atris ; posticis margine albo, infra griseo-irroratis. Upperside blue-black. The head, palpi and anus scarlet. Posterior wing bordered with white. Underside as above, except that the posterior wing is irrorated with pale blue between the nervures from the middle to the outer margin. Exp. 2 2-2, inches. Hab. Surinam. : In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 14. Pyrrhopyga Gortyna. Alis atris ; posticis macula alba, angulo anali sanguineo. Upperside, male, black. The forehead, palpi, anus, and anal — angle of the posterior wing, scarlet. Posterior wing with a large white spot at the apex. Underside black. Posterior wing with the basal half white. Exp. 1,8, inch. Hab. Amazon (Ega). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Near P. Hyperici of Hubner. 15. Pyrrhopyga Galgala. Alis atris ; anticis fascia lineari rufescenti. Upperside black. The neck, forehead, palpi and anus scarlet, Anterior wing crossed obliquely near the middle by a linear band of orange-yellow ; the whole of the outer margin fringed with white. 484. Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions Underside as above, except that the band of the anterior wing is shorter, and that the posterior wing is crossed by a similar band. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Venezuela. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 16. Pyrrhopyga Hadassa. Alis fuscis; marginibus aurantiacis; thorace fasciis duabus sanguineis. Upperside, female, rufous-brown ; the outer margins of both wings orange ; a longitudinal band on each side of the thorax, and the anus, scarlet. Exp. 2 inches. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Closely allied to P. Amyclas of Cramer, but differs from it in having the longitudinal bands on the thorax, in which it resembles P. Scylla of Ménétries. 17. Pyrrhopyga Telassa. Alis fuscis, marginibus aurantiacis ; posticis infra maculis dua- bus sanguineis. Upperside, female, rufous-brown ; the outer margins orange, narrow ; a longitudinal band on each side of the thorax, and the anus, scarlet. Underside as above, except that there are two scarlet spots at the base of the posterior wing. Exp. 2 inches, In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 18. Pyrrhopyga Zereda. Alis czeruleo-nigris ; posticis margine aurantiaco. Upperside, female, glossy blue; the posterior wing bordered — with orange; the neck with a few scarlet hairs. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Ecuador. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Near to P. Amyclas, Cramer, as well as to the two preceding species. of new Hesperide. 485 19. Pyrrhopyga maculosa. Alis nigris; anticis maculis decem albis, una minutissima ; posticis infra dimidio basali aurantiaco. Upperside, male, blue-black. Anterior wing with ten white ‘spots; three in a line across the middle, three between them and the apex (one very minute), and four on the costal margin near the apex. Posterior wing with the fringe alternately black and white. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that there is a spot of orange near the kase. Posterior wing with the basal half orange. Exp. 2.3, inches. s Hab. Bogota. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Genus Erycipes, Hiibner, Westwood. 1. Erycides Telmela. Alis viridi-atris ; anticis macula tripartita fenestrata; posticis angulo anali sanguineo. Upperside blue-green. The head, palpi, fore-femora, the anus underneath, and the anal angle of the posterior wing, scarlet. An- terior wing with a central trifid spot of transparent white, and occasionally nearer to the apex a minute spot of the same colour. Underside as above, except that the outer margins of both wings are broadly brown, irrorated with grey. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Amazon (Para). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Very near to, if not a variety of, EZ. Cleanthes of Latreille. 2. Erycides Thrasea. Alis atris ; infra marginibus griseis. Upperside, male, brown. The head and neck, palpi, fore-femora and anus, scarlet. Underside brown, glossed with blue; the outer margins from the apex to the middle of each wing broadly grey. Exp. 1,7, inch. Hab. Amazon. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Also near to E. Cleanthes, but without spots. 486 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions Genus Hesprrrta, Swainson. I have adopted the genus Hesperia as characterized by Swain- son. Some of the species now described are put by Professor Westwood into his genus Goniloba. I have so often expressed my opinion as to the worthiessness of descriptions only of nearly- allied species of Lepidoptera, that I wish to state here, that I only consider these descriptions as temporary, to secure to myself the pleasure of figuring them one day ere long as my own spe- cies. I have selected for this purpose those only which are most conspicuously characteristic and easily distinguished from each other. 1. Hesperia Aigita. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quatuor-vitreis in triangulum dis- positis ; posticis infra maculis quatuor argenteis. Upperside dark brown; the base of both wings ochreous, Anterior wing much elongated, with four central transparent spots in the form of a triangle, the middle spot within the said triangle. Posterior wing marked below the apex with an indistinct opaque ochreous spot. Underside ochreous-brown. Anterior wing with the basal half dark brown, the spots as above. Posterior wing with the inner margin and anal angle dark brown; four central silver spots, one triangular and larger than the others. Exp. 2,3, inches. Hab. Para. , In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Near to H. Epitus of Cramer, plate 343, but differs from it in its much greater length of wing and in the position of the silver spots. It is from the Collection of Mr. Bates. 2. Hesperia Astria. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis septem vitreis, quatuor in medio dispositis ; posticis infra maculis sex—octo argenteis. Upperside dark brown; the base of both wings ochreous. Anterior wing with seven pale-yellow transparent spots; four central, in the form of a triangle, the middle spot within the said triangle, and three together, minute, before the apex. Posterior wing with one semi-transparent spot. Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that there is a yellow spot on the costal margin which joins one of the vitreous spots. Posterior wing with six or eight silver of new Hesperide. , . 487 spots ; one at the base, minute ; the spot nearest the costal margin sometimes absent, and that nearest the apex sometimes very minute. Exp. 159—23%, inches. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Also near to H. Epitus of Cramer, but differs from it in the number and position of the silver spots. 8. Hesperia Anchora. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quatuor vitreis, tribus in triangu- lum dispositis ; posticis infra maculis duabus argenteis. Upperside dark brown; the bases of both wings ochreous. Anterior wing with four transparent spots in the form of a tri- angle; the middle spot within the said triangle. Posterior wing with one minute opaque yellow spot. Underside rufous-brown. Posterior wing with two central silver spots, one large and triangular, the other small. * Exp. 1,8, inch. Hab. Para. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Also near to H. Epitus, from which it differs in the position of the silver spots. It is from the Collection of Mr. Bates. 4, Hesperia argentea. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis septem vitreis, quatuor in medio dispositis ; posticis infra fasciis duabus latis argenteis. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with seven trans- parent pale-yellow spots, four near the centre but placed widely apart, three together minute before the apex. Posterior wing with one opaque yellow spot. Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with the vitreous spots as above; the spot nearest the costal margin touches a spot of yellow on the margin; the spot nearest the apex is covered by a band of lilac; the spot near the inner margin is obscured by a white spot. ‘Posterior wing crossed obliquely by two broad silver bands connected in the middle, the outer margin touching the lower band, pale rufous. Exp. 1-9, inch. Hab. Guatemala. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Allied to H. Epitus, from which it scarcely differs on the upperside. Below it differs remarkably from it and the species 488 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions described above. One of my specimens was kindly presented to me by Mr. O. Salvin. 5. Hesperia Chalestra. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis octo vitreis, quatuor in medio dispositis ; posticis maculis quatuor; his infra fascidé macu- lisque tribus albis. Upperside dark-brown; the base of both wings ochreous. Anterior wing with eight transparent spots; four in the centre, three together towards the apex, the eighth very minute and below the latter. Posterior wing with four spots, less trans- parent. — Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that the apical spots and the outer central spot are united by an ochreous spot. Posterior wing crossed obliquely by a broad white band, outside of which are three minute white spots; the anal angle and outer margin are also white. Exp. 1,9; inch. Hab. Minas Gueres. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 6. Hesperia Cunaxa. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis novem vitreis, quinque in fasciam dispositis; posticis infra fascia punctoque albis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with nine spots, four of which only are transparent; five in an oblique band across the wing; three together towards the apex, and one minute above the largest spot of the band. Posterior wing with one bifid yellow spot. ‘ Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that the two lowest spots of the band are united by a spot of white. Posterior wing crossed obliquely by a band of white, inside which is a minute white spot. Exp. 1,8, inch. Hab. Northern America. In the Collection of Dr. Boisduval. | 7. Hesperia Ceraca. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis septem vitreis, quatuor in medio dispositis ; posticis maculé alba; his infra fasciis duabus argenteis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with seven transparent of new Hesperide. 489 spots; four near the middle, one of which is bifid; and three to- wards the apex. Posterior wing with one white spot. Underside rufous. Anterior wing as above, except that the basal half is dark brown, and that there is an ochreous spot on the costal margin. Posterior wing crossed obliquely by two bands of silvery white. Exp. 2,3, inches. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 8. Hesperia Ethoda. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quatuor vitreis, posticis tribus ochraceis opacis; his infra fascia lata alba. Upperside dark brown; the base of both wings ochreous. Anterior wing with four large central pale-yellow transparent spots. Posterior wing with three ochreous spots. Underside rufous. Anterior wing as above, except that the basal half is dark brown, and that the two lower spots are united in one. Posterior wing crossed obliquely by a band of white, broadest in the middle. Exp. 2,2; inches. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 9. Hesperia Elia. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis decem vitreis albis ; posticis fascia vitrea alb&; his infra dimidio basali albo. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with ten transparent spots; six in an oblique band from the middle of the inner margin to near the apex, the last two spots of the band near together and minute; three minute subapical spots; the tenth spot within the cell. Posterior wing with a central transverse band of four transparent spots. Underside rufous-brown. Posterior wing with the basal half, except the costal margin, silvery-white. Exp. 1,9, inch. Hab. Sumatra. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson ; from Mr. Wallace. 10. Hesperia Attina. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis octo vitreis, tribus in medio dis- positis ; posticis dimidio interno albo. Upperside dark brown, Anterior wing with eight transparent VOL. Il. THIRD SERIES, PART VI.— FEB. 1866, NN 490 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions white spots; three large ones in the middle, three towards the apex minute, and two below the latter, also small. Posterior wing with the inner half white. Underside as above, except that the anterior wing has a band of lilac at and below the apex, and that the posterior wing is white, except the costal margin, a large space at the anal angle, and the nervures, which are dark brown. Exp. 23 inches. Hab. India and Java. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. A very large species. 11. Hesperta Azona. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quinque vitreis, duabus pone medium dispositis ; posticis macula alba anali. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with five transparent white spots; two beyond the centre, three minute towards the apex. Posterior wing with a large white anal spot. Underside as above. Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Macassar.° In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson ; from Mr. Wallace. 12. Hesperia Barea. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis sex albis vitreis pone medium dispositis ; posticis macul&é magna anali alba; his infra albis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with six transparent white spots; three in a line beyond the centre, and forming a right angle nearly with the three subapical spots. Posterior wing with a large white anal spot. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that the apex and costal margin are broadly rufous. Posterior wing white, with the costal margin and a band of spots on the outer margin rufous- brown. Exp. 1.8, inch. Hab. Sumatra. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Wallace. Nearly allied to H. Azona, from which it differs in form as well as in the white underside of the posterior wing. of new Hesperide. 491 13. Hesperia Belistida. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis quinque aut sex obscuris; posti- cis dimidio interno albo; his infra albis, macula centrali anoque fuscis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with six very obscure pale spots ; three beyond the middle parallel to the outer margin, and three before the apex. Posterior wing with a large space of white from the middle to the inner margin. The abdomen white. Underside. Anterior wing with the basal half dark brown, the margins and apex broadly rufous; crossed from the inner margin towards the apex by an irregular band of white spots; the subapical spots and a spot within the cell white ; the outer margin at and below the apex lilac. Posterior wing white, tinted with lilac at the base; a broad band of lilac at the apex and outer margin ; a central spot of rufous-brown and an apical spot of dark brown. Exp. 1-7, inch. Hab. Para. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson, 14. Hesperia Bursa. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis octo vitreis, tribus in fasciam dis- positis ; posticis macula centrali argentea. Upperside dark brown, with eight transparent white spots ; three forming a transverse band, three as usual before the apex, one towards the middle of the outer margin, and one (minute) near the middle of the inner margin. Posterior wing with a large central Justrous white spot. Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that there are some rays of pale yellow near the apex. Posterior wing with the basal half pale yellow, traversed by nervures of dark brown. Exp. 1,3, inch. Hab. Para. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Bates. 15. Hesperia Cesina. Alis fuscis; anticis fascié maculata obliqua alba; _ posticis macula centrali alba. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with a band of seven white spots from the inner margin towards the apex, the three NN 2 492 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions usual subapical spots represented by two very minute points. Posterior wing with a large central white spot. Underside rufous-brown, Anterior wing as above. Posterior wing- with a broad central band of white. The club of the an- tennz white. Exp. 1,4, inch. Hab. Waigiou. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Wallace. 16. Hesperia Calvina. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis sex vitreis (duabus coalitis), in medio dispositis ; posticis macula centrali alba. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with six transparent white spots, two in the middle united, three towards the apex, and one, minute and more opaque, near the inner margin. Posterior _wing with a central white spot. Underside as above, except that the minute spot near the inner margin is enlarged and united with the spot above it, and that the spot on the posterior wing is yellow. Exp. 1,4, inch. Hab. Para. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 17. Hesperia Catina. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis fasci& trifid& flava; posticis infra margine apicali flavo. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with a trifid band of yellow. Posterior wing with the apical fringe yellow. Underside as above, except that the apical margin of the pos- terior wing is yellow. Exp. 1,9, inch. Hab. Amazon (Tapajos). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Bates. Nearly allied to H. Itea and Haworthiana of Swainson. 18. Hesperia Cathea. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis tribus vitreis in triangulum dispositis, apice albo; posticis infra fascia longitudinali grisea. Upperside dark rufous-brown. Anterior wing with three transparent central pale-yellow spots placed in the form of a triangle ; the apex white. Underside as above, except that the anterior wing has the of new Hesperide. 493 apical half tinted with lilac and the nervures paler, and that. the posterior wing has a longitudinal band of lilac-white and some of the nervures lilac. The antenne ringed with white; the club white. Exp. 2 inches. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 19. Hesperia Certima. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quatuor vitreis, duabus in fasciam junctis ; posticis maculis tribus vitreis in fasciam dispositis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with four transparent central spots, two of which form a transverse band. Posterior wing with three small transparent spots ina line beyond the middle. Underside lilac-grey. Anterior wing with the basal half dark brown; the spots as above ; three indistinct brown spots towards the apex. Antenne with a white ring below the club, Exp. 2 inches. Hab. Venezuela. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. On the underside this species closely resembles H. Baroches of Latreille ; it is of the same lilac-grey, and has the three small triangularly-placed spots which are characteristic of that species. 20. Hesperia Colenda. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis tribus vitreis; posticis margine abdominali et angulo anali aurantiis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with three transparent white spots, the two largest united and forming a transverse band. Posterior wing with the inner margin and anal angle rufous-orange, the fringe at the apex white. : Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that the apex is rufous, and that there is a large subapical lilac spot crossed by a zig-zag line of brown. Posterior wing rufous-brown, with the base, two transverse bands, and a band towards the outer margin, all lilac; the anal angle orange, Club of the antennee white. Exp. 147, inch. Hab. Venezuela. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 21. Hesperia Crotona. Alis fuscis ; anticis fascia trifidi punctoque vitreis albis; pos- ticis infra rufo-fuscis, basi, apice fasciisque tribus lilacinis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with a trifid oblique 494 Mr, W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions band and a minute spot between it and the outer margin trans- parent white. Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that it has two lilac spots towards the apex. Posterior wing with the base, the apex, and three irregular bands, lilac. Exp. 1,3, inch. Hab. Venezuela. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 22. Hesperia Coryna. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis quatuor vicreis, duabus in medio dispositis ; posticis infra argenteis, margine costali fasciisque duabus rufis. Upperside dark brown, Anterior wing with four. transparent spots, two central, and two towards the apex. Underside. Posterior wing of brilliant silver; the costal and outer margins and two longitudinal bands rufous. Exp. 154 inch. Hab. Amazon. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 23. Hesperia tessellata. : Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quatuor vitreis, tribus in medio dispositis, et strigis duabus basalibus; posticis infra albo nigroque tessellatis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with two bands of yellow from the base, and four transparent white spots, three central in the form of a triangle, and one towards the apex. Pos- terior wing with the centre ochreous. Underside. Anterior wing with two bands of yellow spots towards the apex. Posterior wing pale yellow, with the nervures, some spots near the base, a band of similar spots beyond the middle, the outer margins, and a spot at the anal angle, all dark brown. The fringe of both wings white, spotted with brown. Antenne ringed with white at the base of the club. Exp. 1,35 inch. Hab. Macassar. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Wallace. - 24, Hesperia Litana. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis novem vitreis, duabus in fasciam dis- positis ; posticis tribus. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with nine transparent —— of new Hesperide. 495 spots; two forming a central band; three as usual towards the apex; three below the last described and parallel to the outer margin, and one near the inner margin. Posterior wing with three transparent spots. Underside rufous-brown, with the outer margins of both wings broadly grey. Anterior wing with the spots as above, except that the lower spot of the central band and the spot near the inner margin are united. Posterior wing with the basal half brown, marked with some darker spots and a spot of white; crossed beyond the middle by a band of white, which is broad near the costal margin and marked with a brown spot, narrow and formed of small spots where it crosses the middle, and bordered outside by spots of brown. Exp. 1,8, inch. Hab. Venezuela. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 25. Hesperia Lutetia. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis novem vitreis, posticis tribus ; his infra rufo-fuscis, fasciis flavis, macula centrali opacd, margine apicali ochraceo. Upperside dark brown, the bases of both wings canescent. Anterior wing with nine transparent spots; one in the cell, five in an oblique band, and three before the apex. Posterior wing with a transverse central band of three spots. Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that the longitudinal band of spots is extended to the apex. Pos- terior wing with a band of pale yellow near the base composed of two triangles ; a central spot of dark brown, bordered outwardly with yellow ; the apical margin broadly grey. Exp. 1,9; inch. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Allied to H. Dalman of Latreille. 26. Hesperia Opigena. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis octo vitreis, posticis quatuor in fasciam dispositis ; his infra fusco cinereoque nebulosis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with eight transparent spots; one in the cell, four in an oblique band, and three before 496 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions the apex. Posterior wing with four spots, forming a transverse band. Underside as above, except that the posterior wing is crossed before the middle and on the outer margin by broad bands of prey. Exp. 1,8, inch. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. So nearly like H. Lutetia in general appearanee that (if the Hesperide are subject to such great variation) it may be only a variety of it, The underside of the posterior wing is very different. 27. Hesperia Ovinia. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis maculis septem vitreis, posticis tribus in fasciam dispositis ; his infra cinereo-rufis, maculis sex albis. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with seven trans- parent spots. Posterior wing with three (one bifid). Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above, except that it is irrorated with grey near the apex. Posterior wing densely irrorated with grey, and marked with five white spots before the middle and a sixth near the inner margin, forming part of the band of transparent spots. Exp. 1535 inch. Hab. Nicaragua. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 28. Hesperia Perea. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis maculis septem vitreis; posticis infra basi fuscis, fascia maculata margineque exteriori lilacinis. Upperside dark brown, covered with rufous hair, chiefly near the base. Anterior wing with seven transparent spots; one in the cell, four in an oblique band, and two before the apex. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that some of the nervures and the outer margin are lilac. Posterior wing with the base, a spot in the cell, a transverse band of spots (some of them white), and spots near the outer margin, lilac. Exp. 1,6, inch. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. of new Flesperide. 497 29. Hesperia Ophiusa. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis maculis novem vitreis, posticis sex in fasciam dispositis ; his infra cinereis, fascia maculata triangu- lari, margine exteriori rufo-fuscis. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with nine transparent spots; one in the cell, five in an oblique band, and three before the apex. Posterior wing with a straight transverse band of six transparent spots, and between them and the base two less distinct ochreous spots. Underside. Anterior wing as above. Posterior wing grey, bordered with white spots and forming an acute angle near the middle of the outer margin, which is rufous brown. Exp. 13 inch. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 30. Hesperia Memuca. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis maculis quinque vitreis, posticis fascia flava ; his infra coccineis, fasciis duabus flavis. Upperside rufous-brown, Anterior wing with five transparent spots; three forming a central oblique band, and two before the apex. Posterior wing with a transverse curved central pale-yel- low band. Underside. Anterior wing rufous-brown, darkest in the middle ; the apex grey, and a band below it rufous and yellow; the three transparent spots united in one. Posterior wing rufous, crossed by two broad bands of yellow; one at the base on the costal mar- gin, the other in the middle, bordered outside with dark brown. Exp. 13 inch. ; In the Collection of Dr. Boisduval, A beautiful species, near to HZ, Phyneus of Cramer. 31. Hesperia Phaetusa. Alis fuscis ; anticis maculis sex argenteo-vitreis, posticis dua- bus ; his infra rufo-fuscis, basi albis. Upperside dark rufous-brown. Anterior wing with six silvery transparent spots ; one in the cell, three forming a central band, and two before the apex. Posterior wing with two spots. Underside dark rufous-brown, Anterior wing with the spots as above, except that the one near the inner margin is larger and 498 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions united to the spot above it; the costal margin from the base to the middle and rays near the apex ochreous-yellow. Posterior wing with the base broadly white, marked with indistinct brown spots. Exp. 1,4, inch. . Hab. Amazon (Ega). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Bates. 32. Hesperia Physcella. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis maculis septem vitreis, posticis dua- bus; his infra fascia lata marginali alba. Upperside dark rufous-brown. Anterior wing with seven transparent spots ; four forming a central oblique band and three before the apex. Posterior wing with two minute spots below the middle. Underside rufous-brown. Anterior wing as above. Posterior wing with the outer margin broadly white. Exp. 1-8, inch. Hab. Rio Janeiro. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. Near to H. Virbius of Cramer, which has the white border on both sides of the wing. 33. Hesperia Marsena. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis maculis septem vitreis ; posticis infra. rufis, fascia longitudinali alteraque transvers& maculata argenteis. Upperside rufous-brown, Anterior wing with seven trans- parent spots; two in the cell, two central, and three before the apex. Underside. Anterior wing as above. Posterior wing rufous, with a Jongitudinal band near the costal margin from the base to beyond the middle, a linear spot near the base and inner margin, and a transverse central band of four spots, all silvery white; a line of minute white spots below the transverse band. Exp. 2,8, inches. Hab. Sumatra. In the Collection of W. C, Hewitson; from Mr. Wallace. — es of new Hesperide. 499 34. Hesperia Rona. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis maculis quinque vitreis ; ‘Posticis infra ceruleo-viridibus, fasciis duabus rufis. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with five transparent spots; two in the cell and three forming an oblique band. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that the outer mar- gin and a spot near the apex are green. Posterior wing green ; the nervures, two transverse bands and the outer margin rufous- brown. Exp. 13 inch. Hab. Amazon (Para). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson. 35. Hesperia Amana. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis maculis sex vitreis; posticis infra ceruleo-cinereis, macula media fusca, venis albis. Upperside rufous-brown, Anterior wing with six transparent spots ; two in the cell, three forming an oblique band, and one before the apex. Posterior wing paler. Underside. Anterior wing as above, except that the costal margin and apex are glossed with brilliant lilac-blue, in which the nervures are white. Posterior wing lilac-blue, the nervures white, the centre clouded with brown. Exp. 13 inch. Hab. Amazon (Para). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Bates. 36. Hesperia Almoda. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis maculis quinque vitreis; posticis infra cinereis, macula centrali fasciisque duabus fuscis, Upperside dark brown ; the base of the anterior wing and most of the posterior wing rufous-brown. Anterior wing with five transparent spots; three forming an oblique band, and two (one very minute) before the apex. Underside. Anterior wing rufous-brown, the costal margin and apex lilac-grey. Posterior wing lilac-grey, with a spot at the end of the cell and two macular transverse bands of brown, Exp. 13 inch. In the Collection of Dr, Boisduval, 500 Mr. W. C. Hewitson’s Descriptions 37. Hesperia Noseda. Alis rufo-fuscis ; anticis maculis quatuor vitreis, posticis macula vitrea; his infra cinereo-rufis. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with four transparent spots ; two ina band across the middle. Posterior wing with one spot nearer the apex than usual. Underside. Anterior wing with the basal half rufous-brown ; the apical half rufous and lilac-grey, marked with three brown spots in the form of a triangle. Posterior wing rufous and lilac- grey, the anal angle brown. The antennz with a white ring below the club. Exp. 1.8, inch. Hab. Amazon (Tapajos). In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Bates. This species belongs to the group of which A. Certima and H. Cathea (ante, pp. 492, 493) form part. 38. Hesperia Sala. Alis fuscis; anticis maculis quatuor vitreis; posticis infra cinereis, maculis fuscis in circulum dispositis. Upperside dark brown. Anterior wing with four transparent spots ; two in the cell, minute. Underside grey. Anterior wing dark brown near the base ; with three minute brown spots before the apex. Posterior wing with a spot near the middle, forming the centre of a circle of several similar brown spots. Exp. 1,3, inch. Hab. Singapore. In the Collection of W. C. Hewitson; from Mr. Wallace. 39. Hesperia Ogygia. Alis rufo-fuscis; anticis maculis quinque vitreis, quatuor in ‘medio dispositis ; posticis infra rufis, maculis duabus fascidque transversa fuscis. Upperside rufous-brown. Anterior wing with five transparent spots; four together in the middle. Underside rufous. Anterior wing with the base and centre