INSECUTOR INSCITI^ MENSTRUUS 93 



From many pairs reared from galls on Leptospermum 

 ftavescens, September, 1915 (H. Hacker). From Dr. R. Ham- 

 lyn-Harris, 



Habitat: Brisbane, Queensland and as above. 



Types: In the Queensland Museum, Brisbane, four males, 

 nine females on a slide. Cotypes : Cat. No. 20668, U. S. Nat. 

 Mus., one male, seventeen females on a slide. 



Resembles magniclavus Girault from the West Indies. 



Coccophagus pulliclavus, new species. 



Female. — Length, 0.60 mm. Deep uniformly reddish orange, 

 the fore wings uniformly lightly infuscated. Antennae dusky, 

 the club dark brown, the upper face of prothorax black. Club 

 well-defined but barely wider than the funicle, its first two 

 joints subequal, each somewhat longer than wide, 3 nearly 

 twice longer than wide. Pedicel slightly shorter than club 1. 

 Stigmal vein foot-shaped, subsessile. Fore wing about as in 

 Aphelinus fuscipennis as to shape, but the marginal fringes are 

 somewhat longer. Hind wings with about seven lines of dis- 

 cal cilia, their caudal marginal cilia longer than the blade's 

 greatest width. Mandibles weakly tridentate. Body densely 

 scaly. Venation yellow, the marginal vein a little longer than 

 the submarginal. 



Two females in the U. S. National Museum (G. Compere). 



Habitat: Perth, West Australia. 



Type: Cat. No. 20669, U. S. Nat. Mus., one female on a 

 slide. Cotype : In the Queensland Museum, Brisbane, a female 

 on a slide. 



PARAMYIOCNEMA, new genus 



Genotype : Myiocnema marmorativentris Girault. 

 Differs from Bncarsia in having the caudal tibia dorsad 

 armed with long, stiff bristles. 



Bardylis australiensis Howard. 



In the male, funicles 1-3 are subequal. As described orig- 

 inally. The vertex is orange. The hind femora are often 

 brown black. There are specimens in the U. S. National 



