586 The Philippine Journal of Science 1922 
It is certainly very closely allied to Panargyrops. The posi- 
tion of the propodeal spiracles far in front of the costelle is 
very characteristic, and together with the long pubescence and 
general habitus indicates the close relationship. I would not, 
_ however, go so far as to place it in Panargyrops because of the 
very broad, unseparated, tridentate clypeus and the very long 
upper tooth of the mandible. 
Chrysocryptus ? romani sp. nov. 
Both generic and specific characters are given in the following 
description: 
Female.—Length, 12 millimeters; antennz, 7; ovipositor, 7; 
front wing, 10. Entire body polished and practically without 
sculpture, clothed with long, mostly erect, golden pubescence, 
this embracing also the coxe, trochanters, and femora especially 
of the hind: legs, and the wings especially the costa (on the 
wings the pubescence is blackish). 
Head transverse; the temples convexly sloping; vertex broad, 
elevated above level of top of eyes; occipital carina ‘strong, 
gradually fading out on lower cheeks; head in front view trans- 
verse; eyes very large, prominent, convergent below; malar 
space almost obliterated; face more than twice as broad as long, 
slightly impressed on each side below antennz, its pubescence 
subappressed; clypeus much longer than face, very weakly sep- 
arated, lateral angles and fovee nearly touching the eyes, nearly 
flat with apex broadly rounded and with three distinct denticles 
in the middle; mandibles large, slightly tapering and with the 
upper tooth much longer than the lower; palpi rather short, 
“slender, the apical two joints of maxillary palpi together but 
little longer than third; antenne rather slender, slightly stouter 
beyond middle and tapering toward apex; apex of scape only 
slightly oblique; flagellar joints becoming gradually shorter 
from basal, which is about three times as long as thick. Thorax 
small, narrower than head, much smaller behind; notauli strong 
and terminating abruptly, without joining, shortly before the 
scutellar fovea; pronotum practically without pubescence, with 
a short foveolate groove at lower angle, epomia strong but 
short; prescutum sharply defined, the carina emarginate opposite 
the sternauli, wihch are very deep anteriorly but become obsolete 
posteriorly; mesopleural furrow foveolate above; metapleurum 
separated from sternum by a high carina, from the anterior end 
of which a short carina extends obliquely onto the pleurum; 
