G2G NEW SPECIES OF BRACONID.2B. 





center; metathorax minutely rugulose, with two parallel longitudinal 

 keels on the disk; legs browii, the trochanters and tarsi paler; abdo- 

 men smooth, polished, the petiole two-thirds the length of the abdomen, 

 delicately aciculated, yellowish. Wings fusco- hyaline, clear at base 

 and at apex, with a hyaline streak extending across the wings from 

 the base of the stigma ; veins brown. 



Habitat. — Alameda County, California. 



Described from two specimens received from Mr. Albeit Koebele, la- 

 beled " Parasite on coleopterous larva on redwood." No date is given. 



Subfamily PAMBOLINiE. 



DIMEEIS Ruthe. 

 Dimeris rufipes u. sp. 



Female.— Length, 2 mm ; ovipositor, f mm . Black, polished ; legs, lateral 

 margins of 1st abdominal segment, the sides and sides of the 2d seg- : 

 ment, rufous; head subrotund, smooth, the face pubescent; mandibles 

 red; palpi pale; antenna; 17-joiuted, terminal joints of nagellum, sub- l 

 moniliform, the terminal joint being two and a half times as long as j 

 the preceding; parapsidal grooves distinct, converging and meeting 

 posteriorly; the collar and metathorax rugose, the latter also areo- 1 

 lated with the posterior angles subeonic; abdomen long, subcom pressed 

 along the sides, a little longer than the head and thorax together; the 

 1st segmeut rugose, the following smooth but. more or less wrinkled. I 

 Wings hyaline, veins yellowish, stigma and costie brown; the sub- j 

 median cell is much longer than the median, while the 3d cubital cell) 

 is not entirely closed. 



Habitat. — Lafayette, Indiana. 



Described from a single specimen received from Mr. F. M. Webster,* 

 of Lafayette, Indiana. 



Subfamily DORYCTINiE. 

 DORYCTES Haliday. 



Doryctes longicauda n. sp. 



Female. — Length, 4f mm ; ovipositor, 8"" n . Stature and form similar 

 to Exothecus aeiculatus Cr., but at once recognized by the very long 

 ovipositor and its different sculpture. Head, antennae, legs, and the 

 middle lobe of mesothorax, brown ; the head is finely rugose, subquad-j 

 rate; the whole thorax is rugose, the metathorax having a delicate 

 median longitudinal groove anteriorly; the two basal abdominal seg-i 

 ments are longitudinally striate, the following segments smooth and 

 polished, although under a high power they exhibit a delicate punelua-i 

 tion. Wings dusky, the veins pale; the venation as in E. aciculatW 

 Cr., which belongs to this group. 



Habitat— Texas. 



Described from one specimen in Belfrage collection. 



