84 BRITISH ICHNEUMONS. \Campoplex 



1903. Tostock ill Suffolk in early September (Tuck); Redland near 

 Bristol in July (Charbonnier); Yorkshire (Porritt), Kingsdown in Kent, 

 August (Sladen), Botusfleniing in Cornwall and Nantua in France (Mar- 

 shall), West Runton, Norfolk in August, 1900 (Wainwright), Shere 

 (Capron) and Greenings in Surrey (Saunders). Throughout August, iqoi, 

 1 found this species sparingly in Matley Bog in the New Forest, always 

 upon the flowers of Angelica sylvestris ; and on 9th August, 1897, a female 

 occurred on flowers of umbels in the Little Blakenham chalk pit, near 

 Ipswich. 



20. punctatus, Bridg. 



Caiupoplcx punctatus, Bridg. Trans. Ent. Soc. 1886, p. 345, c? ; cf. Bridg. - 

 Fitch, Entom. 1885, p. 16 ; Schm. Opusc. Ichn. no. 55, <? . 



Head oblique behind the eyes ; face dull, finely punctate and pubes- 

 cent ; palpi black, mandibles centrally broadly flavous; frons finely 

 granulate, with no carina. Thorax with mesonotum somewhat coarsely 

 but not deeply punctate, interstices reticulate; mesopleurae somewhat 

 coarsely and closely punctate, with glabrous interstices ; metanotum 

 irregularly rugose and nitidulous, with areola well-defined and its carinae 

 elongate. Scutellum sparsely and not finely punctate, laterally margined 

 to beyond its centre. Abdomen dull, pubescent and black with the 

 second segment red or obscurely ca.staneous apically, third red and usually 

 with its base discally infuscate, fourth red and usually with its centre dis- 

 cally or its apical half black; third segment two-thirds length of second, 

 convex below, with no lateral black line; basal segment slender and 

 reticulate, with postpetiole apicallv subexplanate and spiracles slightly 

 prominent. Legs black with front ones partly fulvidous; intermediate 

 tibiae and tarsi pale castaneous. Wings with stigma (in my co-type) 

 luteous; radix and tegulae piceous; areolet petiolate, emitting recurrent 

 nervure before its centre; nervellus subgeniculate at its lower third, 

 emitting no nervure. Length, 9.5 mm. ^ onl}-. 



It appears to differ little from C. lapponicus, except in the capital 

 conformation, which is not clearly expressed in the description ; I possess 

 a (J co-type from Capron's collection and find the head hardly less buc- 

 cate than that of C. hucciilenltis, which it very strongly resembles, differ- 

 ing mainly in the more deeply impressed metathorax, the paler stigma 

 and much smaller alar areolet. 



" Taken by Mr. Harwood " (P)ridg. Inc. ci/.), probably about Colchester. 

 Mr. Van Burgst records the female (Tijds. v. Ent. 191 1, j). 11) from The 

 Hague in September. 



21. juvenilis, Forsf. 



Caiupoplcx juvenilis, Forst. Verb. z.-b. Ges. 1868. p. 779; Bridg. -Fitch, 

 Entom. 1885, p. 16 ; Schm. Opusc. Ichn. no. 46, cf ? 



A black species witli the abdomen centrall}- and the legs, except only 

 basally, fulvous; hind femora pale; third segment nt)t laterally black- 

 lined. Head transverse and posteriorly constricted; mandibles and palpi 

 flavous; frons distinctly carinate centrally. Thorax with the mesopleureae 

 finely and closely punctate, the interstices alutaceous; apical half of the 



