20, 5 Cushman: Oriental and Australian Ichneumonide 549 
half as wide as postpetiole; second tergite nearly twice as long 
as wide at base; third and fourth nearly quadrate; ovipositor 
very briefly exserted; epipleura of middle tergites broad. 
Dark ferruginous; face and clypeus yellowish; antennz black, 
ferruginous at base and with an incomplete white annulus em- 
bracing flagellar joints 8 to 14; wings yellowish hyaline, venation 
ferruginous; hind tibia except at base black; hind tarsus white, 
its basal joint fuscous at extreme base, apical joint ferruginous. 
Type locality —Los Bafios, Luzon, Philippine Islands. 
Type.—Catalogue No. 24038, United States National Museum. 
One female received from C. F. Baker. 
Acanthojoppa mutica sp. nov. 
Male.—Length, 9 millimeters; antenne, 9. Agrees with A. 
polita sp. nov. in lacking the propodeal apophyses, the low 
Scutellum, and the polished pleura and propodeum, but differs 
as follows: Face medially punctate, raised laterally above the 
outer corners of the clypeus; clypeus nearly flat with deep fover, 
apex truncate and with a single row of large punctures; labrum 
concealed. Thorax about as in A. polita, but scutellum distinctly 
convex and notauli much shorter; median areas of propodeum 
broader, areola nearly as broad as long, hexagonal, and very 
close to base of propodeum, lateral abscissz of apical carina 
practically continuous with median abscissa; nervulus inter- 
stitial. Abdomen broader, second and third tergites punctate 
at least basally, all beyond second broader than long. 
Pale ferruginous, thorax laterally, petiole, and front and mid- 
dle legs luteous; antenne black, ferruginous at base and pale 
in middle; wings only slightly yellow tinged; hind legs ferru- 
ginous, the tarsi only slightly paler. 
Type locality—Zamboanga, Mindanao, Philippine Islands. 
Type.—Catalogue No. 24039, United States National Museum. 
One male received from C. F. Baker. 
Genus CTENOCHARIDEA novum 
The pectinate claws place this genus in the Listrodromini. 
In Ashmead’s key to that tribe it runs to Ctenochares Foerster. 
No specimen of that genus is available for comparison, but 
from the description of it and its various synonyms the present 
genus differs in having the head rather broad behind the eyes, 
the clypeus rounded at apex, the thorax short and stout, the pro- 
podeum without teeth, the wings not clouded at apex, and the 
areolet obliquely trapezoidal. . 
