438 Annals of thf Soiif/t African Museum. 



In the ? the edge of the truncate part of the upper valve is partly 

 serrate, and the under part of the lower conspicuously so. 



Hob. Southern Rhodesia, E. Pillaus ; Northern Ehodesia (Feira), 

 S. Wehr ; Mozambique. (Beira), J. D. F. Gilchrist, P. Phillips ; 

 Zanzibar, M. Wilman. 3 $ $ , 3 ? ? . 



ENYALOPSIS BINDURANUS, n. sp. 



$ . Somewhat lighter-coloured than the other South African 

 species of the genus, which have always a more or less dark bronze 

 tinge ; on that account the broad black lateral baud of the prouotum, 

 and the supra-lateral patch on the first abdominal segment, are more 

 conspicuous than usual. The head is as in E. petersi ; but the frontal 

 spine is much more vertical than in any other South African species ; 

 the pronotum is also much narrower, but the spines are equally long, 

 and the two of the lateral apical process less divaricating; the edge of 

 the upper valve of the ovipositor is not serrate, nor is the lower part 

 of the lower valve. 



The formula of spines on tibiae is : fore, 5-5 ; intermediate, 5-5 ; 

 posterior, 15-16, the upper one of the latter removed from the others. 



Length of body 43 mm. ; of pronotum 15 mm. ; of hind femur 

 15 mm. ; of hind tibiae 18 mm. 



Hah. Southern Ehodesia (Bindura), D. Coghill. 1 ? . 



ENYALOPSIS MATABELENSIS, Sjosted. 

 Ark. f. Zool. 8, 1913, p. 12, pi. 3, figs. 3, 3a. 



I have not yet met with this species, which Sjosted compares to 

 E. durandi, but in which the valves of the ovipositor are of the type 

 of those of E. petersi, E. binduranus, and apparently not serrate, thus 

 resembling those of E. binduranus. 



The formula of spines on tibiae is : fore, 5-5 ; intermediate, 4 

 (inside)-3 (outside) ; posterior, 5-12. 



Hab. Southern Ehodesia (Matabeleland), teste Sjosted. 



Length of body 32 mm. ; of pronotum 16 mm. ; of hind tibiae 

 18 mm. 



ENYALIOPSIS TRANSVAALENSIS, u. sp. 



Darker bronze than any of the South African species. In the shape 

 of the spinous lateral process of the fore part of the prouotum it 

 resembles E. durandi and E. patruelis that is to say the blunter 

 hind angle and the sharp spine are not much divaricating ; the 

 prouotum is broad, the spines are conspicuous but not quite as 

 elongate as in E. petersi. The ovipositor is well developed, the scooped 



