244 Albany Mtiseum Records. 



Head smooth and shining ; two furrows run from the 

 antennae to the mouth : they are straight and [tarallel : below they 

 curl inwardly slightly. Mandibles rufo-testaceous in the middle. 

 Ocelli separated from each other by a distinctly less distance than 

 they are from the eyes. Third antennal joint fully 3 times the 

 length of the pedicle, and shortly (about one fourth) longer than 

 the fourth : the last joint is compressed, thinner and laterally 

 clearly separated from the penultimate and longer than it. Malar 

 space large, as long as the 3rd antennal joint. Mesonotum and 

 scutellum smooth and shining : the parapsidal furrows deep : 

 metanotum not so shining at the base ; the rest of the segment 

 closely, irregularly i-eticulated. U[)per half of mesopleura? smooth, 

 the lower irregularly reticulated — less strongly than the meta-- 

 pleurae. Lower part of propleura^ obscurely striated at the base. 

 Metasternal process bifid at the apex ; the branches short, about 

 one fourth the length of the keel, roundly curved ; the keel itself 

 is narrow. The transverse median nervure is received distinctly 

 beyond the transverse basal : the recurrent nervure near the base 

 of the 2nd cubital cellule. 



The median cellule is not confluent with the cubital ; being 

 separated from it by an oblique nervure before the stigma, closing 

 the cubital cellule beliind. It is therefore an Evmiia sensu str., 

 but it differs from the typical species in the transverse basal 

 nervure being received at a distance from the stigma, not touching 

 it as usual. 



The sternal keel is longer, with the forks shorter and more 

 rounded than usual The 2 apical abscissae of the radius are 

 paler than the basal,; broadly rounded at their junction. Abdominal 

 petiole smooth and shining. Tibiae and tarsi with a few weak 

 spines. The long spur of the hind tibiae is about two-thirds of 

 the length of the metatarsus. 



This species should, inter alia, be known by the short, 

 roundly curved forks of the sternal process, by the transverse 

 cubital nervure being received at a distance behind the stigma, 

 and by the compressed apical joint of the antennae. 



