Vol. XXVJ ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 455 



The exuviae of Hagen's description and the Kissimee River 

 larva may just as well be the early stages of the Gomphoides 

 recorded by Pollard* from North Carolina as they may be of 

 producta. The Texas exuvia is somewhere near these, but it 

 is impossible to say what the species may be. PHILIP P. 



CALVERT.] 



i <> 



A new Platygasterid Genus with Remarkable 

 Antennae (Hym.). 



By ALAN P. DODD, Nelson, via Cairns, Queensland. 

 MIRAMBLYASPIS nov. gen. 



$ . Head transverse, a little wider than the thorax ; eyes 

 large ; ocelli rather wide apart, the lateral ones distant from 

 the eye margins by no more than their own diameter ; mandi- 

 bles bidentate. 



Thorax twice as long as wide, narrowed anteriorly ; pro- 

 notum distinctly visible from above, especially on the sides ; 

 mesonotum longer than wide, parapsidal furrows wanting; 

 scutellum lengthened, projecting over the metathorax and 

 terminating in a straight, sharp spine. 



Abdomen broadly rounded behind ; a little longer and dis- 

 tinctly wider than the thorax ; petiolate ; first segment twice 

 as long as wide, with two carinae ; second segment occupying 

 two-thirds the abdominal length, scarcely longer than wide. 



Legs extremely long ; all trochanters lengthened ; anterior 

 tibiae not much lengthened, anterior tarsi fully three times as 

 long as their tibiae ; middle tibiae lengthened, middle tarsi 

 about twice as long as their tibiae ; posterior legs nearly twice 

 as long as the whole body, posterior tibiae very long, their tarsi 

 scarcely longer than the tibiae ; tarsi 5-jointed. 



Forewings very long, extending well beyond apex of abdo- 

 men ; without venation. 



Antennae 13-jointed, very long, as long as the posterior legs ; 

 filiform; scape, pedicel, eight funicle joints, and between each 

 of the four apical funicle joints there is a small joint, resem- 

 bling a ring joint, quite distinct, small but a little longer than 



*Ent. News, xxii, p. 79. 1911. 



