20, 5 Cushman: Oriental and Australian Ichnewmonide 563 
“Type.—Catalogue No. 24045, United States National Museum. 
Three females from C. F. Baker. 
Elasmognathias dentatus sp. nov. 
Distinct from all known species by the strong propodeal 
spines, striate sculpture of the thorax, and arrangement of color. 
Female.—Length, 10 millimeters; antennz (broken) ; front 
wing, 8.5. Face very weakly punctured; thorax and propo- 
deum mostly finely striate; mesoscutum weakly punctate; scu- 
tellum elevated, at summit with a more or less distinct median 
elevation, postscutellum smooth; carinzee weak; prepectus sub- 
emarginate at sternauli, latter sharply impressed; propodeum 
with a strong blunt tooth on each side surmounted by a carina, 
other carine in this region wanting. No black mark on face; 
eyes entirely surrounded by yellow; thorax black, with broad 
anterior margin and humeral margin of pronotum, tegule, 
scutellum and postscutellum, lower half and posterior margin 
of mesopleurum, subalar tubercle, dorsoanterior division of 
metapleurum (that portion of metapleurum lying between the 
mesothorax and propodeum), large spot at apex of metapleu- 
rum, one on each side of propodeum surrounding and including 
the spines yellow; front and middle coxe and trochanters and 
basal joint of hind trochanter, hind coxa except a large black 
spot nearly encircling the coxa yellow; front and middle tarsi 
fuscous; hind tarsi white, narrowly black at ‘base; legs other- 
wise stramineous to testaceous, the hind femur and tibia more 
or less piceous at base and apex; calcaria fuscous; wings yel- 
lowish hyaline. Abdomen black with petiole, apex of post- 
petiole, and apices of all other tergites, more broadly at sides, 
yellow. 
Type locality—Los Bafios, Luzon, Philippine Islands. 
Other locality.—Mount Maquiling, Luzon, Philippine Islands. 
Type.—Catalogue No. 24046, United States National Museum. 
Two females from C. F. Baker. 
The paratype is somewhat more heavily sculptured than the 
type, especially on the mesoscutum, and has the apical elevation 
of the scutellum less prominent. 
CRYPTINAZ 
The two Oriental genera treated below run in Schmiede- 
knecht’s Genera Insectorum key to the Mesostenini directly to 
Nematopodius Gravenhorst, and are rather closely related to 
that genus. The following key will serve to separate the three 
genera: 
