﻿40 



orioinating- lit-ncath the stigma and in tiie radial cell and forming 

 a transverse fascia. First joint of front tarsi very long about 

 twice as long as the elongated fourth, second very small, third 

 larger than this* but still small, the fourth being much longer than 

 the preceding two together. Abdomen smooth and without defi- 

 nite sculpture. Length 4 mm. 

 HAB. Mexico (? Pazcuaro). 



Hcspcrodryimis gen. nov. 



This new gerus is proposed for three slender and elongate 

 species, evidently allied to Paradryiiius. All are of a ferruginous 

 or testaceous colour, with short, but functional, wings, which 

 are banded. The head is of peculiar form, being acutely wedge- 

 shaped posteriorly, the hind margin when the head lies back, 

 resting over a considerable part of the pronotum and entirely 

 concealing the prolongation of the prothorax in front of the 

 pronotum. Consequently, when seen from in front, the hind mar- 

 gin of the head is well rounded and extended far back behind the 

 eyes, the posterior ocelli being placed well behind an imaginar}^ 

 iine joining the hind margins of the eyes. In Paradryinus, when 

 the head is viewed from in front, the hind margin is nearly 

 straightly transverse and the posterior ocelli generally about on a 

 line with the hind margin of the eyes. The pronotum is strongly 

 compressed at the sides posteriorly, so that it is there bluntly 

 cariniform, its sculpture and that of the head is very dense and 

 minute, the surface being quite dull. Otherwise the genus greatly 

 reseml:)les Paradryiiiiis, the maxillary palpi with four long joints 

 be}ond the geniculation, the two Ijasal ones, as usual, less dis- 

 tinctly divided, the basal apparently less chitinized and perhaps 

 more or less fused to the maxilla. Labial palpi three-jointed, the 

 apical one very long and cylindrical. The front legs are formed 

 much as in Paradryinus, but are rather stouter; the second joint 

 of the tarsus is very small, the third much longer, but still much 

 shorter than the fourth ; the chelar claw of one species differs re- 

 markal)ly in structure from that of the others ; the lamellate den- 

 ticles of the fourth joint are well developed and reach or nearly 

 reach back to the articular cavity. 



The males of two species are known, and these mlay be easily 

 distinguished from those of Paradryinus by the eyes having com- 

 ])aratively few and short hairs, hardly noticeable under a strong 

 lens, and by the much less conspicuously hairy antennae. In 

 both species the femora and tibiae are black, while in all the 



