NO. 2197. NEW PARASITIC HYME NOPTERA—GAHAN. 213 



tibiae and all tarsi paler; scape reddish testaceous, flagellum dark 

 brown ; wings hyaline, veins pale broAvnish. 



^/ale. — Length l.iio mm. Sculpture of the head and thorax simi- 

 lar to that of the female but stronger; abdomen oval, not longer than 

 the thorax; head and thorax brass}^ green; scap^ and all funicle 

 joints testaceous, pedicel brownish above, club black; legs, except 

 coxae, concolorous with the antennal scape; forewing with the area 

 between the postmarginal and stigmal veins cloudy, rest of the wing 

 hyaline. Other characters as in female. 



Type-locality. — Nephi, Utah. 



Type.— C^t. No. 20391, U.S.N.M. 



Host. — Bruchophagus funehris Howard. 



Four females and eleven males reared by T. D. Urbahns, October 

 26, 1914, and recorded under Webster No. 13315. Also a large series 

 of male paratypes reared from B. funehris material at Salt Lake, 

 Utah, by T. R. Chamberlin and recorded imder Webster No. 6612. 



Family EULOPHIDAE. 



Subfamily Entedoninae. 



CHRYSOCHARUS MALLOCHI, new species. 



Very similar to Chrysocharus parksi Crawford but differs in hav- 

 ing the petiole much shorter than the hind coxae, the propodeum 

 short and without a distinct hump toward the apex, and the coxae all 

 pale like the rest of the legs. 



Female. — Length 1.54 mm. Green with strong brassy reflections 

 on the head and thorax above: the lower part of face, scutellum, 

 pleura, and abdomen beyond the first tergite purplish or bronzy; 

 face below distinctly wrinkled, frons almost smooth or with very 

 faint reticulations; first funicle joint nearly twice as long as the 

 pedicel and slighth^ longer than joint two; club with two joints and 

 an apical spine: mesoscutum and scutellum faintly reticulated: pro- 

 podeum nearly smooth with apparently two faint medial carinae, 

 mesopleura with an oval sunken area which, like the prepectus, is 

 distinctly sculptured: wings hyaline, the postmarginal vein more 

 than twice as long as the stigmal; abdomen short, ovate, smooth 

 dorsally, the petiole rugulose and abruptly narrowed basally. 



Male. — Essentially like the female. 



Type-locality. — Parker, Illinois. 



Type.—Q^t^^o. 20392, U.S.N.M. 



Host. — Agromyza felti Mai loch. 



Four specimens sent to the Bureau of Entomology under Illinois 

 State Laboratory of Natural History No. 45806, and labeled as 

 reared April. 1914. by J. R. Malloch. 



