INSECUTOR INSCITI^ M^NSTRUUS 43 



whose joints are wider than long; club equal pedicel and 

 funicle united, obliquely truncate from base of 3. Finely 

 sculptured. Mandibles tridentate. Frons bristly. Tips tibiae 

 and knees paler. 



Sydney, New South Wales, forest, October 28, 1917. 



Epanogmus, new genus. 



Like Pseudanogmus but abdomen with a more distinct 

 petiole (a very short petiole in named genus), it is still more 

 depressed, shorter, being rounded, distinctly wider than long, 

 segments all large and equal after 2 which, as in other, occu- 

 pies one-fourth to one-third surface. Antennae strongly cla- 

 vate, the segmentation of club not very distinct, 2 ring- joints, 

 the first very short, 13-jointed (club 3-), inserted a bit above 

 ventral ends of eyes, the scrobes forming a deep straight chan- 

 nel to cephalic ocellus. Parapsidal furrows complete, curved, 

 delicate, the scutum twice wider than long (longer in the 

 other). The postmarginal vein is somewhat longer than the 

 stigmal. Propodeum has a very short neck as in the other, 

 no median carina but continuous lateral carinae which loop 

 from one side to the other across meson near apex ; spiracle 

 more minute and a second lateral carina starts just meso- 

 caudad of it and runs straight to caudo-lateral angle (in other 

 there is a tooth toward caudal margin, caudad of spiracle). 

 Clypeus shorter, obtusely incised at meson. Scutellum simple. 

 Marginal thickened at base, one-fourth longer than stigmal. 

 Femur 3 stout. Genotype follows. 



Epanogmus breviventris, new species. 



Green, wings hyaline but with a sooty cross-stripe from the 

 thickening of the marginal and a blotch from postmarginal, 

 involving the stigmal and fusing proximad with the cross- 

 stripe. Scape, pedicel beneath and legs save coxae, red. Finely 

 scaly-punctate, abdomen polished nearly. Ring-joint 2 twice 

 wider than long, so distal f unicles ; f unicles 1-2 subquadrate, 

 widening distad. 



Jungle along Mulgrave River near Gordonvale, December 2, 

 1918. 



