644 NEW SPECIES OF BRACONIDiE. 



Subfamily CALYPTINiE. 

 EUBADIZON Nees. 



Eubadizon phymatodis n. sp. 



/<y,>m/c— Length, 5""" ; ovipositor, 4| mm . Black, polished ; face cov- 

 ered with white sericeous pile ; palpi pale; legs, excepting posterior 

 coxjc basally, reddish-yellow. Antennae 2S-joiuted, black, except the 

 suture between the 2d and 3d joints, tips involuted; when extended 

 backwards the antennae reach a little beyond the base of the abdomen, j 

 The mesothoracic parapsidal grooves are deep and converge and meet i 

 before attaining the base of the scutellum, thence as a delicate keel; 

 the sides of the collar and the mesopleura, although shining, are finely 

 rugose ; scutellum smooth with a large fovea at base, metathorax and 

 the 1st. 2d, and 3d abdominal segments rugose. Wings hyaline, veins 

 brown, stigma black; the venation as in B. pleuralis Cress., only the 

 transverse median nervure is interstitial with the basal nervure. 



The male does not differ structurally from the female except in hav- 

 ing 31-joiuted antennae and the posterior portion of the middle meso- 

 thoracic lobe being coarsely punctulate. 



Habitat.— Washington, D. C. 



Described from three specimens, two males and one female, reared' 

 April 11, 13, and 16, 1889, from Phymatodes amcenus Say. 



The sculpture of the three basal abdominal segments will at once sep- 

 arate this species from E. americanus Cress., to which it seems most 

 closely allied. 



Eubadizon incognitus n. sp. 



Female.— Length, 3 mm ; ovipositor, H mn \ Black, shining, covered 

 with a short, sparse pubescence ; face prominent, opaque, finely puuc^ 

 tulate, pubescent; two deep fovea' at basal corners of clypeus ; palpi 

 pale ; antenna? 30-jointed, the two basal joints above black, beneath 

 brown ; flageilum brown ; mesothoracic parapsidal grooves deep, punc- 

 tulate at bottom, and converging and meeting before reaching the base 

 of the scutellum; collar at sides coutlueutly punctured; mesopleura' 

 smoother, with a deep, punctulate sulcus across the disk; metathorax 

 as long as wide, rugose ; legs reddish yellow, the tips of posterior femora 

 and their tarsi slightly dusky ; abdomen as long as the thorax, the 1st 

 segment minutely sculptured, with a more or less longitudinal, glabrous 

 line basally; the following segments smooth, polished, the 2d segment 

 only exhibiting a slight microscopical sculpture toward the base. Wingi 

 hyaline, the venation as in E. pleuralis Cress., only the cubitus is brokei 

 near the base and does not attain the apical margin. 



Habitat.— Kirk wood, Missouri. 



1 ►escribed from two specimens, received from Miss M. E. Murtfeldt 

 labeled " Parasite on 97m, October 9." 



