152 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [April, 'l6 



Frons less horizontal, face not so projecting being white but not 

 glistening snow-white. Cilia of posterior orbits developing into two or 

 three stout bristles at buccal extremity. Mesopleural fringe, of more 

 numerous bristles, especially of $ , is very dense and close. 



Scutellum of $ longer and more acutely pointed with noticeably 

 long pile. Bristles of fore femora very long. Length 4.7 mm. 



Type. $ , 40 miles North of Lusk, Wyoming, July, 1895, 

 (U. of K. Lot 425), [Univ. of Kansas Coll.] 

 Paratypes. 2 5,6$, topotypical. 



DIMECOENIA n. gen. 



This genus is proposed for the reception of Caenia spinosa 

 Loew, its type species. It differs from Cocnla, as based on 

 its genotype, Ephydra palustris Fallen, in the absence of pul- 

 villi and having the claws long and nearly straight. In these 

 respects it resembles Ephydra, but in the present genus there 

 are only two frontal orbital bristles and no post-humeral or 

 prescutellar bristles. The pre^-frontal bristles are strongly 

 developed. The genus seems intermediate between Coenia 

 and Ephydra but is constant in the characters mentioned. 



Here also belongs Ephydra austrina Coquillett, of which 

 Caenia virida Hine is a synonym. I have examined the cotypic 

 series of Coquillett's and Hine's species. It is strange that 

 both authors overlooked the characteristic tufts of hair on the 

 hind tarsi of the male of this species. This is described by 

 Aldrich in his paper on "Two Western Species of Ephydra."* 



A new Genus of Eulophidae from the United States 



(Hym.). 



By A. A. GIRAULT, Washington, D. C. 



PSEUDOLYNX new genus. 



Belongs to the Omphalini and is characterized by its robust- 

 ness, the elongate stigmal vein and middle tibial spur. 



1. Pseudolynx io new species. Genotype. 



o . Length 3.00 mm. Robust. Head a little wider than long, large. 



Dark metallic green except the reddish brown femora, tibiae, tarsi 

 and scape (except above along more than the distal half). The fol- 



*Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc. xx, 101, 1912. 



