﻿444 
  PROCEEDINGS 
  OF 
  THE 
  NATIONAL 
  MUSEUM 
  vol.96 
  

  

  slightly 
  above 
  middle, 
  reclivous, 
  upper 
  abscissa 
  perpendicular. 
  Legs 
  

   stout 
  and 
  rather 
  short; 
  hind 
  coxa 
  rather 
  short-ovate, 
  flattened 
  dor- 
  

   sally; 
  hind 
  femur 
  little 
  longer 
  than 
  combined 
  coxa 
  and 
  trochanter; 
  

   tibia 
  somewhat 
  expanded 
  apically, 
  inner 
  calcariumx 
  barely 
  half 
  as 
  long 
  

   as 
  basitarsus, 
  nearly 
  uniform 
  in 
  thickness 
  and 
  without 
  a 
  conspicuous 
  

   fringe 
  of 
  long 
  hairs 
  along 
  inner 
  margin 
  ; 
  basitarsus 
  much 
  shorter 
  than 
  

   other 
  joints 
  combined, 
  apical 
  joint 
  much 
  longer 
  than 
  fourth, 
  rather 
  

   slender 
  and 
  decurved, 
  claws 
  rather 
  wealdy 
  curved, 
  coarsely 
  pectinate 
  

   in 
  female, 
  closely 
  so 
  in 
  male. 
  

  

  Abdomen 
  (pi. 
  56, 
  fig. 
  98) 
  : 
  Kather 
  weakly 
  compressed 
  and 
  in 
  

   profile 
  slender; 
  first 
  tergite 
  broad 
  and 
  stout 
  with 
  spiracles 
  at 
  about 
  

   apical 
  two-fifths, 
  sternite 
  barely 
  reaching 
  a 
  point 
  ventrad 
  of 
  spiracles; 
  

   tergites 
  1-3 
  subequal 
  in 
  length; 
  tergite 
  2 
  with 
  umbo, 
  gastrocoeli 
  

   near 
  base, 
  indistinct, 
  spiracles 
  about 
  at 
  middle; 
  tergite 
  6 
  in 
  female 
  

   deeply 
  cleft 
  medially; 
  hypopygium 
  in 
  female 
  extremely 
  long, 
  directed 
  

   downward 
  (in 
  museum 
  specimens) 
  and 
  wrapped 
  around 
  the 
  ovipositor 
  

   which 
  is 
  directed 
  upward 
  with 
  its 
  tip 
  enclosed 
  in 
  the 
  short 
  sheath, 
  

   which 
  does 
  not 
  extend 
  above 
  the 
  apical 
  tergite, 
  ovipositor 
  rather 
  

   long 
  and 
  stout 
  with 
  the 
  deep 
  round 
  dorsal 
  notch 
  near 
  the 
  apex 
  ; 
  male 
  

   genitaha 
  unusually 
  long. 
  

  

  The 
  genotype 
  is 
  the 
  only 
  known 
  species. 
  It 
  is 
  shining 
  black 
  with 
  

   pale 
  reddish 
  antennae 
  and 
  tarsi 
  and 
  deeply 
  infumate 
  wings. 
  It 
  is 
  

   known 
  only 
  from 
  Mexico. 
  

  

  15. 
  Genus 
  EREMOTYLUS 
  Foerster 
  

  

  Eremotylus 
  Foerpter, 
  Verh. 
  naturh. 
  Ver. 
  preuss. 
  Rheinlande, 
  vol. 
  25, 
  p. 
  150, 
  

   1868 
  (no 
  species 
  included). 
  — 
  Thomson, 
  Opuscula 
  entomologica, 
  fasc. 
  12, 
  

   p. 
  1193, 
  1888. 
  — 
  Bratjns, 
  Arch. 
  Ver. 
  Freunde 
  Naturg. 
  Mecklenburg, 
  vol. 
  43, 
  

   p. 
  98 
  (1889), 
  1890. 
  — 
  Sz^pligeti, 
  in 
  Wytsman, 
  Genera 
  insectorum, 
  fasc. 
  

   34, 
  p. 
  35, 
  1905 
  (part). 
  — 
  Schmiedeknecht, 
  Opuscula 
  ichneumonologica, 
  

   fasc. 
  18, 
  p. 
  1450, 
  1908; 
  suppl. 
  fasc. 
  24, 
  p. 
  49, 
  1935. 
  [Genotype: 
  Anomalon 
  

   marginatus 
  (Gravenhorst) 
  Jurine. 
  First 
  species 
  included.] 
  

  

  Camptoneura 
  Kriechbaumer, 
  Zeitschr. 
  Hj'm. 
  Dip., 
  vol. 
  1, 
  pp. 
  22, 
  23, 
  1901. 
  

   [Genotype; 
  Anomalon 
  margincdus 
  (Gravenhorst) 
  Jurine. 
  By 
  designation 
  of 
  

   Viereck, 
  U. 
  S. 
  Nat. 
  Mus. 
  Bull. 
  83, 
  p. 
  27, 
  1914.] 
  Isogenotypic 
  with 
  Eremotylus 
  

   (Foerster) 
  Thomson. 
  

  

  I 
  have 
  seen 
  no 
  specim.en 
  representing 
  this 
  genus. 
  Certain 
  North 
  

   American 
  species 
  have 
  been 
  referred 
  to 
  it, 
  but 
  according 
  to 
  the 
  

   descriptions 
  by 
  Thomson 
  and 
  Brauns 
  and 
  the 
  additional 
  characters 
  

   communicated 
  by 
  J. 
  F. 
  Perkins 
  such 
  reference 
  is 
  incorrect. 
  They 
  are 
  

   properly 
  referable 
  to 
  Enicospilus 
  despite 
  their 
  lack 
  of 
  alar 
  scleromes. 
  

  

  In 
  erecting 
  Eremotylus 
  it 
  was 
  Foerster's 
  intention 
  to 
  include 
  in 
  it 
  

   those 
  species 
  of 
  Ophion 
  in 
  the 
  broad 
  sense, 
  in 
  which 
  the 
  discocubitus 
  

   is 
  unbroken 
  and 
  the 
  discocubital 
  cell 
  lacks 
  scleromes. 
  In 
  his 
  un- 
  

   pubhshed 
  manuscript 
  he 
  assigned 
  to 
  it 
  Ophion 
  bombycivorus 
  Graven- 
  

   horst 
  and 
  Ophion 
  undulatus 
  Gravenhorst. 
  Ophion 
  marginatus 
  he 
  

  

  