578 The Philippine Journal of Science 1922 
bilobed at apex; face at sides and clypeus coarsely transversely 
rugose-punctate, more finely so toward middle and with a nar- 
row unsculptured median line; clypeus with a small median 
tooth at apex; cheeks with coarse, separated punctures becoming 
smaller and sparser on temples where they gradually disappear. 
Pronotum coarsely punctate above, otherwise as in malayensis; 
mesoscutum more coarsely punctate, notauli and median groove 
of prescutum wanting; scutellum sculptured like mesoscutum, 
narrow at apex, obscurely margined only at base; mesopleurum 
coarsely punctate, the striate area of malayensis here replaced 
by a smooth polished area, anterior furrow obscure, not foveo- 
_late; prepectal carina bending sharply toward anterior margin 
shortly above level of ventral angle of pronotum; sternaulus 
deep anteriorly but fading out shortly behind middle of pleurum, 
not foveolate; mesosternum with a ridge running forward from 
the antecoxal tubercle; metapleurum coarsely rugose-punctate; 
propodeum medially punctate, carinze mostly rather weak but 
with distinct apophyses that are fully as high as their basal 
width, propodeal area only slightly, concave, separated from 
posterior lateral by distinct carinze; discocubitus not broken; 
nervulus not triangularly broadened at its lower end; nervellus 
broken at a very wide angle, hind coxa with a high, sharp 
carina on its exterior dorsal margin; inner hind calcarium 
barely reaching middle of basitarsus. Abdomen more coarsely 
punctate, especially on petiole, which is polished only at extreme 
base, the median dorsal carine almost contiguous on the petiole 
and nearly obliterated hy the coarse sculpture; third tergite 
broadly rounded at apex; ovipositor as long as second tergite. 
Colored like malayensis except that the wings are yellowish 
hyaline, the hind femur not black at apex, the hind tarsus yel- 
low with the apical joint reddish, and the ovipositor sheath 
reddish at base. 
Male.—Differs from female practically only in having the 
basal two-thirds of the antenne ferruginous with only the 
faintest indication of the annulus. 
Type locality—Los Bafios, Luzon, Philippine Islands. 
Other localities—Mount Maquiling and Mount Banahao, 
Luzon, Philippine Islands. 
Type.—Catalogue No. 24055, United States National Museum. 
Described from three females and two males, all received 
from C. F. Baker. Only slight variation in size is displayed 
by the type series. 
