ART. 5 GENERIC REVISIOISr OF THE FOSSORIAL WASPS — PARKER 41 



North Carolina: Southern Pines (June 5, 1909, A. H. Manee) ; "White Lake. 

 Bladen County (March, 1909, F. Sherman). 



This species has also been reported from Wisconsin. 



STICTIELLA TUBERCULATA (Fox) 



Monedula tuberculqta Fox, Proe. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila.. 189."j, p. 360. 

 Stictiella tulerciilata Parker, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 52, 1917, p. 34. 



Fox's type, which is in the collection of the Academy of Natural 

 Sciences of Philadelphia, is from Nevada. A specimen of this 

 species, which I have examined, was taken b}' Mr. C. L. Fox at 

 Lewiston, Idaho. 



STICTIELLA CALLISTA Parker 



Stictiella callista Parkbjr, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 52, 1917, p. 34. 



The type and allotype of this species (both in the United States 

 National Museum) were taken at Mesilla Park, N. Mex., by Cockerell, 

 the former on June 9, 1898, and the latter on July 21. 



STICTIELLA BITUBERCULATA Parker 



Monedula tenuicornis Fox, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila.. 1895, p. 369, male 



(not female). 

 Stictiella bituierculata PARKsai, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 52, 1917, p. 36. 



The male of this species is characterized by its narrow head, its 

 curved middle metatarsus destitute of spines on the curved surface, 

 the bituberculate second sternite, and the paired discal spots, almost 

 white, on the tergites. The female resembles the female of fenui- 

 cornis^ from which it may be distinguished by the characters set forth 

 in the accompanying key. Furthermore, the abdomen of the female 

 of tenuicornis is more slender and the tendency of the fasciae on 

 the tergites is to inclose black discal spots, whereas on hltuhercndata 

 the tendency of the fasciae on the tergites is to break up into lateral 

 and discal yellow spots. 



SPECIMENS examined 



California: San Bernardino County (Coquillet) ; Los Gastos Canyon, Mount 

 Diablo Range (June 2, 1907, J. C. Bradley). 



This species has been reported from Arizona and New Mexico. 

 Type. — In the United States National Museum. 



STICTIELLA EMARGINATA (Cresson) 



Monedula emarginata Cbesson, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phila., vol. 4, 1865, p. 468. 

 Monedula mamillata Handlirsch, Sitz. Akad. Wissensch. Wien, Math.-Nat. CI., 

 vol. 99, 1890, p. 146. 



In this species the head is narrower than the thorax, more evident 

 in the male than in the female, and the second cubital cell is greatlv 



