270 €. A. L. SMITS VAN BURGST, TUNNSIAN ICHNEUMONIDAR. 
behind it; basal abscissa short, apical slightly undulate, parallel 
with external side of stigma, consequently radial cell very 
short; areola wanting; nervus areolarıs much longer than 
length of its distance from nervus recurrens secundus; lower 
outer angle of diseoidal cell slightly obtuse, almost rectangular; 
nervus basalis curved, rising almost vertically; nervus dis- 
cocubitalis unbroken, diverging with nervus basalis; nervulus 
interstitial, nervus parallelus below the centre of outward 
nervure of brachial cell. In hind wing nervellus vertical, broken 
below its centre; abscissula hardly longer than nervus recur- 
rens. Legs slender, hind ones long in proportion, femora not 
thickened, calcaria, especially of hind tibiae, conspicuously 
thin and short, claws simple. 
Abdomen subsessile, as long as head and thorax together, 
elliptical, in © the apical half subcompressed ; all segments 
except basal one broader than long; segment 1 straight apically 
and 2 basally, corners not rcunded; first segment not carinate, 
with glymmae; spiracles a little behind the centre. Abdomen 
finely coriaceous, thinly pubescent; segment 1 and 2 more 
densely sculptured. Terebra thin and straight, longer than 
basal segment. Length 21% mm. 
Head, antennae and thorax black, apical half of mandibles 
reddish ; tegulae and stigma fulvous, radix of wings flavous ; 
abdomen piceous, second segment partly fulvous; legs fulvous ; 
all coxae black; femura partly black; tarsi infuscate. 
In spite of its glymmae I place this genus in the Æuryproctina- 
group on account of its thin and short tibial spines. 
1 and 2 oc captured in April on the ruins of Carthage, 
by sweeping wild flowers, 
Professor Dr. J. Ritzema Bos, Direetor of the Phytopatho- 
logical Institute, at Wageningen. 
