NO. 2332. VARIOUS NEW SPECIES OF HYMENOPTERA—OJRAULT. 179 



both. Differs markedly from the Indian colemani in that the latter 

 has segment 3 of the abdomen a little wider than long and striate 

 along meson for over half its length, the scutellum is finely scaly in 

 that species and the fore wings narrow (here broad). Tarsi reddish- 

 yellow also each end of the tibiae narrowly; segments 4-7 with numer- 

 ous very minute punctures. Scutum with a granulate appearance. 

 Funicle 3 oval, 4 globular; club 5-jointed, 2 largest, 3 and 4 subequal, 

 each a little shorter than 2 and subquadrate. Eyes hairy. 



Three females from the eggs of Caligula japonica, Central Japan, 

 (J. H. Watson and A. D. Imms). 



Types.— Csit. No. 20604, U.S.N.M., the females on a tag. 



ANTERIS VffiGENIENSIS Ashmead. 



The females agree in sculpture with the male type; funicle 4 is 

 smallest; the base of segment 3 of the abdomen is also yellowish; (in 

 the male nearly the whole of 3) rest of abdomen (except 2 and 3) 

 finely scaly. In the male, the collar is but obscurely yellow; segment 

 4 of the abdomen longest, subglabrous, 3 striated along its basal two 

 thirds. 



CERAPHRON CARLYLEI, new species. 



Female. — Very similar indeed to hasalis Ashmead but differing 

 in having only the scape (except rather broadly at apex) brownish- 

 yellow, the abdomen is a half less broadly yellow at base above (nearly 

 proximal half in hasalis) the thorax is scaly reticulate not glabrous, 

 the striae at base of the long segment 2 of the abdomen are longer. 

 Closer to pallidiventris Ashmead but at once distinguished from that 

 species in bearing just distad of the apex of the scutellum a short, 

 curved horn while in the other species there is at this place only a 

 mucronate spot; moreover the. antennae are more slender, the size 

 a third smaller, the striae at base of abdomen somewhat longer, 

 funicles 2-4 subquadrate, 5 not plainly wider than long but subquad- 

 rate, three-fourths the length of 6 (the club appearing 4-jointed, in 

 the other 3-jointed), not half the length in the other. Otherwise as 

 in hasalis. Both species bear a sulcus between the lateral ocelli on 

 the vertex. 



Compared with the types of hasalis and the evident type of pallidi- 

 ventris (labeled as that species but without "type," in Ashmead's 

 handwriting and "Fort Pendleton, West Virginia, July 7")- 



Type.—Csit. No. 20843, U.S.N.M., the female on a tag, a pair of 

 wings and an antenna on a slide. 



Described from one female, Urbana, Illinois. 



MACROTELEIA RUSKINI, new species. 



Female. — A half smaller than jloridana Ashmead and differing 

 from it in a number of characters as follows: At base of abdomen 

 there is a distinct hump (a less noticeable horn than is usual for 



