6 
keng in January, 1921. These are divided into several distinct 
groups: First, a species of Agaonidae, the true caprifiér of the 
figs; second, a group of 6 species, representing 5 genera, which 
probably are all inquiline and forming galls of their own inside 
the figs. These do not fall at all well in any of the subfamilies 
cr tribes recognized by Ashmead, but numbers of the group 
probably were included by him under the Idarninae, although 
the more correct position apparently would be a new subfamily 
of the Callimomidae; third, 5 species of Idarninae, represent- 
ing 3 genera; fourth, 3 species of the genus Ormyrus; fifth, 
7 species of Decatoma. 
* Undetermined Cricket from Honolulu.—Mr. ‘Timberlake 
exhibited specimens of a small peculiar cricket found in rub- 
bish in old boxes stored in a shed at Kaimuki. ‘This species 
has been collected before, by Mr. Terry at Kekaha, Kauai 
(May, 1906), and about Honolulu, by Messrs. Ehrhorn and 
Swezey. 
** New Ichneumonmd.—Mr. Swezey exhibited specimens of 
an Ichneumonid recently collected by him in a weedy lot at 
Kaimuki, which is apparently a new immigrant here, not pre- 
viously recorded. 
Nesotocus giffardt—Mr. Swezey reported having seen bor- 
ings of this beetle in branches of a Cheirodendron tree on a 
ridge above Hauula. This is the farthest record for this weevil, 
and now makes its range extend throughout the whole Koolau 
mountains of Oahu. 
Ptinus villiger Reit—Mr. Swezey exhibited a specimen of 
this beetle of the family Ptinidae, which was taken with three 
others from a box of butterflies at Rockford, Illinois. It is 
a museum pest which he had not seen before, and one which 
museum collections in the Hawaiian Islands are not troubled 
with. 
Kelisia paludum Wirk—Mr. Muir exhibited a specimen of 
* Cycloptiloides americanus (Sauss.), as determined later by Morgan 
Hebard. [Ed.] 
** Casinaria infesta (Cress.), as determined later by R. A. Cushman. 
[ Ed.] 
