— ZI9 — 



Described from three specimens. Its much Iargei size will at once 

 distinguish it horn //. Uptocorisce How., which has been described as 

 having been reared from the eggs of Leptocorisa tipuloides. This is a 

 mistake, it should have been the eggs of Be/us longipes L. var. bilobus 

 Say. Mr. Hubbard, having incorrectly identified, figured and described 

 this species in Ins work referred to above. 



XI. IV. SCELIO Latreille. 



71 i. Scelio ovivora Riley. 



Calaptenobia ovivora Riley. First Rep. U. S. Ent. Com. p. 306. 

 •o famelicus Say. Riley's Second Rep. U. S. Ent, Com. p, 270. 

 llah.- Western States. 

 Prof. Riley, in the '.'Second Report U. S. Ent. Coram." says this 

 3 1- i lentical with Sparasion famelicus Say, a statement in which I 

 1 agree, for Say in his description of Sparasion famelicus distinctly 

 says : ' ' tw > distant dorsal longitudinal impressed lines on thorax, " a feature 

 not ( haracteristic of the genus Scelio, and of the several species of Scelios 

 in my collection, not one exhibits this character ; moreuver, neither in 

 Prof. Riley s figure ol ovivora, nor in his description is this character given. 



72 2. Scelio hyalinipennis n. sp. 



. Length .13 to .15 inch. Black or brown-black, rugoso-punctate. Face 

 1 1! ■■ '■■ <\ converging toward mouth. Antennae, including scape, brown- 



black, angles of metathorax prominent, sub-acute. Legs rufous, the 



: kish. Abdomen finely punctate and covered with fine pubescence, first 

 ila 1 igo e, cond segment more finely striate. Wings and veins 



hyalin< . stigma! slightly tinged with brown. 



Hab. -Florida. 

 7:) 3. Scelio fuscipennis n. sp. 



. Length . 14 inch. En stature and general appearance this species resembles 

 the preceding, but the wings arc fuscous an I the legs pile yellow-brown. It also re- 

 sembles a European species, Scelio in, rmis Zett, but in that species the legs are black. 

 Hab. — Florida. 



XLV. INDRIS Foerster. 



Note.— A species, belonging to the genus Goniozus Foerster, de- 

 scribed by Mr. L. O. Howard m a note to " Hubbard's Insects Affecting 

 Orange Trees" [app. p. 217], was accidently overlooked by me in pre- 

 paring a list of the subfamily Bethylincs, and should be added to the two 

 species described in Entom. Amer., July, p. 76, as follows : 



3. Goniozus Hubbardi How. Hubbard's Ins. Aff. Orange Trees, app. p. 257, 

 Hab. Florida. 

 1 have had the 1 ■ ing Mr. Howard's type, in the collec- 



tion of the U. S. Department of Agriculture and it is very distinct from 

 the other two forms in our fauna. Mr. Hubbard reared the sprues from 

 a Tortricid [Platynota rostrana). 



