312 Albany Museum Records. 



apex closely, strongly reticulated antl thickly covered with long 

 silvery hair ; on the sides, above the middle, is a stout, obliquely 

 turned up tooth. Abdomen smooth ; the last segment long, broad 

 at the base, gradually narrowed towards the apex, forming an 

 approach to Phasgonoj^hora or Trigonoura. 



Ghalcis Pym% sp. nov. 



Black, the' base of aljdoiiien, its sides and ventral surface, hind 

 coxfe except below, hind trochanters and femora bright red, the 

 apices of the 4 front femora, tibiae and tarsi testaceous yellow ; the 

 hind femora with 12 stolit black teeth ; the apical the largei, the 

 basal 4 shorter, broader and closer together. Wings hyaline, the 

 nervures black. Female. 



Length 6 m.m. 



Grahamstown. Mr. F. Pym. 



Front and vertex irregularly rugoselj^ reticulated, the face 

 moi-e iri-egiilarly and weakly punctured and thickly covered with 

 long white pubescence ; in the centre is an irregular smooth and 

 shining longitudinal line, dilated in the centre ; its apex raised, 

 smooth and shining. Occiput irregular, tratisverSely striated, the 

 stHse more of less broken. Pronotum closely, transversely rugose ; 

 the mesonotum more strongly, irregularly transversely reticulated ; 

 the scutellum more closely rugosely, reticulated ; its apex almost 

 transverse and covered with long white hair. Hind coxfe nearly 

 as long as the femora, closely punctured on the sides and below ; 

 they are about .3 times longer than their width in the middle. 

 Metanotum reticulated, the base with a row of regular reticulations ; 

 above this (on the post-scutellum ?) are 2 stout, longish teeth, 

 obliquelj" directed upwards ; below the centre of these is a trans- 

 versely striated longish area. 



Tanycoryphus, gen. nov. 



Hind femora with one stout tooth shortly behind the middle, 

 the part above it closely, minutely serrate ; the anterior femora 

 greatly swollen, twice the thickness of the middle. Antennae 

 11-jointed, the scape long and thin, the flagellum stout. Sides of 



