Page:Memoirs on the coleoptera (IA memoirsoncoleopt01case).pdf/25

Rh male of insolens the abdomen is not quite so broad as in the female, and the sixth tergite is trapezoidal, transversely truncate at tip, the truncature feebly and vaguely crenulate, the surface at apex bounded at the side by a feebly oblique narrow straight and even carina, the general surface of the segment strongly micro-reticulate and with numerous large cariniform granules.



Mesosternal process rather long, extending nearly to apical fourth of the coxæ, rather wide, the apical-prolonged part becoming parallel, with its apex rounded and separated from the short and very broad angulate metasternal projection by a moderate interval; the first four joints of the hind tarsi are equal, the infra-lateral carinæ of the head very fine and feeble, though nearly entire, and the eyes moderate in size. The type is the following:

This strikingly distinct species is dedicated with pleasure to Rev. J. H. Keen, who has made many interesting discoveries among the small clavicorn Coleoptera of the northern coast of British Columbia.



The body is rather small in size, the abdomen parallel, the mesosternal process very acute and aciculate at apex but not prolonged beyond the middle of the coxæ, separated from the very T. L. Casey. Mem. Col. 1. Sept. 1910.