NO. 2029. DESCRIPTIONS OF NEW HYMENOPTERA, S— CRAWFORD. 345 



polished ; pedicel distinctly longer than the first joint of the funicle, 

 which is hardly longer than broad, following joints of funicle, not as 

 long as broad; club five-jointed; mesoscutum sliiny, with large, scat- 

 tered punctures; wings hyaline; abdomen narrow, elongate, as long 

 as the head and thorax combined; first and second abdominal seg- 

 ments each with a row of short striae basally; second segment about 

 one and one-half times as long as broad. 



Male. — Length about 0.75 mm. Brown, with the abdomen darker; 

 face testaceous, shading into brown above; antennae and legs, includ- 

 ing coxag, testaceous; similar in sculpture to the female; the three 

 basal joints of the funicle subquadrate, the rest transverse, the apical 

 joint subquadrate. 



Habitat. — St. Josephs River, Trinidad. 



Described from 10 females and 15 males reared from tabanid eggs 

 in January, 1912, by F. W. Urich. 



Type.— C&t. No. 16036, U.S.N.M. 



TELENOMUS MERIDIONALIS Ashmead. 



Among the material sent by Mr. Urich there is a fine series of this 

 species reared from the eggs of a pentatomid, with the record, La 

 Josefine, Sangre Grande, Trinidad, January, 1912, F. W. Urich, 



TELENOMUS ALBITARSIS Ashmead. 



The above-mentioned material contained a large series of this form 

 reared from the eggs of a noctuid, with the record, St. Joseph, Trini- 

 dad, September, 1912, P. Lachmere-Guppy, collector. 



Superfamily CHALCIDOIDEA. 



Family EURYTOMID^. 



CHRYSEIDA INOPINATA Brues. 



The U. S. National Museum possesses one female from Browns- 

 ville, Texas, with the date, June 6, E. A. Schwarz, collector, and one 

 male from the same locality, with the record, "2-3-'13" bred from 

 Oncideres putator by M. M. High, Chittenden (Bureau of Entomology, 

 U. S. Department of Agriculture), No. 1921. 



NEORILEYA ASHMEADI, new species. 



Female. — Length about 2 mm. Black, with the scape rufo- 

 testaceous, obscured with fuscous, and the femora and tibiae, except 

 apices, honey color; apices of femora and tibiae and the tarsi whitish; 

 antennae (the club missing) dark brown; head and thorax finely 

 umbiUcately punctured; face with a median carina from antennal 

 fossa to mouth parts and also laterad a few striae converging towards 

 mouth parts; outer orbits with a carina coming over top of eye and 

 down inner orbits to a point opposite middle of antennal fossa, where 



