20, 5 Cushman: Oriental and Australian Ichneumonide 593 
principally in having the clypeus entirely and the face largely 
white, the flagellum pale ferruginous beneath, and the fourth 
tergite, as well as the first to third, white at base and apex. 
OPHIONINA 
Zacharops narangae Sp. nov. 
The only way in which Zacharops as described by Viereck 
differs from Charops is in its lack of the mesosternal processes 
between the hind coxz. The genotype also differs from that 
of Charops in having the scutellum concave between the lateral 
carinee, the head thinner and more nearly lenticular, and the 
eyes more sharply emarginate. In all of these characters the 
present new species agrees with Zacharops; while it agrees bet- 
ter with Charops in the lack of complete propodeal areas and 
mesopleural impression and the form of the abdomen, especially 
of the first tergite, which is less slender with the postpetiole 
more bulbous than in Zacharops annulipes (Ashmead). 
Female.—Length, 9 millimeters; antennz, 6; front wing, 5. 
Head set very close to thorax, strongly lenticular, vertex and 
temples very strongly receding, opaque-punctate and, with the 
thorax, densely silvery pilose; face slightly narrower below than 
at antennez; malar space half as long as basal width of mandible; 
ocellocular line more than half as long as diameter of lateral 
ocellus; thorax in both dorsal and lateral views short-ovoid, the 
propodeum very precipitous from base; pronotum rugose; mes- 
oscutum very densely punctate, more coarsely so in the positions 
of the absent notauli; scutellum opaque-punctate, very densely 
pilose, slightly concave; mesopleurum reticulate-rugose, convex 
throughout, without impression; metapleurum divided longitu- 
dinally by an auxiliary carina, below which it is reticulate- 
punctate and above which it is transversely rugose; propodeum 
laterally transversely rugose, medially reticulate, the lateral and 
basal carine obsolete, others absent; abdomen slender; first 
tergite curved upward, postpetiole strongly bulbous, more than 
half as long as the slender petiole, without carine; second tergite 
slightly compressed for its entire length and with a small im- 
pression on each side at about the middle (this is common to 
the genotypes of both Charops and Zacharops) ; the spiracles 
slightly before apical fourth; tergites 3 to 5 subequal, little more 
than half as long as second, each deeper than the one preceding, 
sixth shorter and deeper than fifth, others very small; ovipositor 
barely exserted; entire abdomen beyond first tergite densely 
clothed with short, appressed pubescence. 
