140 
by me to the parasites, there issued from the first, after it had 
pupated, 60 males and 25 females on November 15-16; from 
the second 1 male and 17 females on November 15-16; and 

Fig. 5. Nesencyrtus kaalae. Antenna of male. 
from the third 1 male and 45 females about November 24. 
Presumably, these were already parasitized when exposed to the 
parasites from October 25 to November 7. The parasitized 
pupa above noted was so closely packed with the pupation cells 
of the parasite that even the front femora were utilized. 
From a parasitized larva of Nesoprosopis fuscipennis col- 
lected by Dr. F. X. Williams December 14, 1919, on the Manoa 
Cliff trail, Oahu, there issued 62 females on December 26. 
From the larva of a small Nesoprosopis sp. possibly N. koae 
Perkins, collected by Dr. Williams, January 4, 1920, on the 
waterfalls ridge, Manoa Valley, Oahu, at about 1600 feet eleva- 
tion, and which did not show parasitism when found, there 
issued 16 males and 10 males on January 27-29. 
The Oahu males, which had not been seen previously, 
proved to be identical with the males from Kilauea, Hawaii, 
described in these Proceedings, Vol. 4, p. 223. The Kilauea 
females, however, have the head somewhat thinner fronto- 
occipitally and the frontovertex proportionately wider or about 
one-half longer again than wide instead of about twice as long 
as wide as in the Oahu specimens. ‘The frontovertex is also 
deeper blue, but the coloration does not differ materially other- 
wise. 
Wesencyrtus sp. 
One female collected at a steam crack near Kilauea, Hawaii, 
