324 Records of the Indian Museum. [Vol. VIII, 



entirely pale ; the tenth to seventeenth flagellar joints white, with 

 the remaining twelve apical ones ve y short and exactl}'^ filiform ; 

 the metathoracic spot , unplaced by Cameron is here represented 

 by a large metapleural mark and the whole petiolar area, except 

 the centre of its apex, flavous ; apices of all the segments pale 

 and genitalia exserted ; the hind legs red with trochanters, 

 extreme base of both the white tarsi and white tibiae, with apices 

 of the last broadly and of their femora narrowly, and the onyches, 

 deep black. The position of this genus with its single species in 

 the Lissonotides rests solely upon the typical petiolar structure, 

 for the areolet is subquadrate and parallel-sided as in the Meso- 

 stenides, though emitting its recurrent nervure from its centre; 

 the unicalcarate front tibiae and indiscreted clypeus are good fea- 

 tures. 



Mctopius rufus, Cam. 



Zeits. Hym.-Dip., 1905, p. 281. 



A single female at Dibrugarh between 17th and 19th Novem- 

 ber, 1911. 



CEdematopsis aborensis, Mori., sp. n. 



Black with the whole legs, thorax except discally and head 

 except vertically, stramineous; mesonotum rosy; scutellum 

 pale. Head strongly buccate behind, though less elongate 

 than in (E. apollos, Mori. (Faun. India, Ichn. 50), and stra- 

 mineous with only the vertex from scrobes to occiput, including 

 stemmaticum and excluding orbits, deep black. Antennae fractae, 

 infuscate with scape whitish beneath. Thorax with pleurae fineh^ 

 punctate, mesonotum glabrous and strongly glittering, rosy (as 

 in (E. ops, Mori. (Ichn. Britannica, iii, 273), its lateral sutures 

 and pronotal disc black ; metanotum scabrous with areola 

 strongly elongate, emitting strong and short costulae ; basal area 

 short and entire, petiolar area nearly as long as areola and trans- 

 strigose. Scutellum and postscutellum flavous, the former finely 

 punctate and laterally margined nearly to its apex. Abdomen 

 parallel-sided and very slender, punctate-rugose with the basal 

 segment roughly aciculate and its spiracles far before the centre ; 

 ventral valvulae large, black and exserted. Legs slender, with the 

 somewhat stout hind tibiae hardly infuscate apically and before 

 their base. Wings normal, with the stigma and nervures 

 stramineous. Length, 5 mm, cf only. 



A single cf was captured at Sadiya in north-east Assam by 

 Mr. S. W. Kemp of the Abor Expedition on 28th November, 1911. 

 Type in the Indian Museum. No, H^-. 



Allocamptus sinuatus, Mori. 



Revis. Ichn. Brit. Mits., 1912, p. 24. 



One female was captured at artificial light below Dosing at 

 1400 feet on 29th January, 1912. 



