Vol. 1] Timljerl-ake. — New Genera and Species of E ncyrtinae 361 



eyes moderate in size, oval, one-third longer than wide, slightly 

 pubescent; mandibles (fig. 6, C and D) narrowed toward apex 

 with two nearly equal, blunt or rounded teeth, of which the 

 dorsal is more apical; antennal scape (fig. 6, A) cylindrical, 

 moderately long, reaching considerably beyond plane of front, 

 pedicel as long as the first four funicle joints ; funicle six-jointed, 

 increasing slightly in width distad, all joints short, transverse ; 

 club large, oval, somewhat longer than the funicle, in life hardly 

 wider than funicle, but after death collapsing so that it is much 

 wider, its sutures plainly visible, the last joint longest with a 

 rounded area of softer tissue at its apex. Thorax of normal 

 structure, the pronotum arched, the mesoscutum transverse, the 

 axillae meeting medially, the scutellum flat, triangular with apex 

 slightly rounded, its sides abruptly declivous ; wings large, uni- 

 formly ciliated, with oblique hairless streak or speculum ; mar- 

 ginal vein punctiform, stigmal moderately long, its apex triang- 

 ularly enlarged, postmarginal nearly as long as the stigmal, but 

 rapidly tapering and becoming transparent, bristles on submar- 

 ginal vein reduced ; costal cell of hind wing narrowed distad but 

 extending to the booklets; legs longer and slenderer than nor- 

 mally, especially the middle pair, the middle tibial spur moder- 

 ately^ long and slender, shorter than the first tarsal joint. Ab- 

 domen rather subquadrate in shape, its sides nearly parallel, the 

 apex subtruncate ; excluding the ovipositor, which is slender and 

 prominently protruded, its length is about erpial to two-thirds 

 of the thorax ; the venter not at all compressed, the fifth sternite 

 reaching to the apex. Sculpture alutaceous, the frontovertex 

 more coarsely so; vestiture moderately abundant, dark colored 

 on the thorax ; coloration flavous, the collar of pronotum, tegulae 

 and appendages concolorous. 



MALE 



A^ery similar to the female, but the frontovertex is wider, the 

 ocelli larger, the antennae (fig. 6, B) a little shorter with slightly 

 longer, thicker pubescence, the club solid and slenderer, the post- 

 marginal vein considerably shorter, and the abdomen more ovate. 



