J. (;hestkr brauley. 167 



Face weakly swollen, smooth and polisliefl, in the middle a small tubercle. 

 Yellowish-red; the head, antennse, hind legs, abdomen and petiole, 

 except the apes, black; first two and half of the third joint of llie 

 fiagelluni, apex of the petiole, troclianters and base of the tibiae while; 

 anterior and middle legs except the coxa" and trochanters brownish. 



kriegeriana Enderlein, West Borneo. 



Kvaiiia Nzepligelii n. nom. 

 1903. Evanla parva Szepligeti, Ann. Mus. Nat. Huiigai-ici, vol. 

 i, page 381, is preoccupied by Evanla parva Enderlein, Archiv. liir 

 Natiirg., 1901, p. 193. 



Evaiiia enderleiiii n.sp. 

 (Fig. 59, 6.5 and 78.) 



'^ , 9 . — Entirely black, except tiie four anterior tibise and tarM are brown, and 

 segments 2, 3 and 4 of the antennae of the 9 are dirty yellownsh-white. Head 

 seen from above transverse ; eyes very prominent and with but little space behind 

 them, tiie occiput being almost wanting ; posterior ocelli equally far from each other 

 and from the compound eyes. Profile with the compound eyes projecting above 

 the vertex and very small, scarcely extending below tlie level of the anteunse, so 

 that the malar space is about equal to the length of the eyes. The clypeus and 

 face are very convex ; about six carinte on each side of the face, converging 

 towards the apex of the clypeus, and about double their own length apart; a 

 more strongly marked carina in the centre; about five carinse on the cheeks ex- 

 tending from the base of the eyes to the mandibles; the temples above the base 

 of the eyes and the vertex behind the ocelli are coarsely subreticulate. The 

 forehead has a strong mesal carina, and two carinse on each side parallel to the 

 inner margin of the eyes, the remaining carinse are interrupted below the ocelli 

 by a depressed smooth area above each antenna; this area, while appearing 

 smootl), is really slightly shagreened. In the male the sculpture of the head is 

 much obscured by a dense whitish vestiture. which is present on the head, thorax 

 and propodeum much more strongly than in the female, giving a decided silveiy 

 sheen ; in the female the scape is very long (Fig. 59), a little less than one-half as 

 long as the flagellum ; at the end of the scape the antenmc are strongly elbowed, 

 and the fiagelluni is thickened and strongly recurved at joints 5-7; joint 3 is 

 about the length of joints 4 + 5, which are about equal in length to each other, 

 and of the flagellum only the first joint is twice as long as broad ; in the male the 

 antennse are not elbowed or recurved, entirely filiform, much longer than in the 

 female; the scape about the length of joints 2 + 3; the latter about the length of 

 joint 4 or 5, which are subequal, and all the joints of the flagellum are at least 

 twice as long as broad. 



Entire thorax and propodeum very coarsely reticulate, except the ujiper part of 

 the mesopleurse are smooth and poii.shed, and the entire venter is more shallowly 

 and le.ss coarsely reticulate; the humeral angles are square; mesonotal grooves 

 lacking; the furcula has divergent but blunt and not very long tynes (Fig. 65). 



The wings are hyaline (Fig. 78) ; the veins M beyond m-cu, Mj + j. m and the 

 longitudinal part of Mj are very faint. The posterior coxaj, femora and tibise are 

 coarsely pun<'tured and hairy; the tarsal claw is very peculiar, in that it is bifid 

 and the inner ray much stronger and longer than the outer ray, and thrown 



TBANS. AM. ENT. SOC. XXXIV. MaY, 1908. 



