128 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
(9) 8. Third segment shining ; hind calcaria longer 
4. gracilipes, Thoms. 
(8) 9. Third segment coriaceous ; hind calearia shorter 
5. brevicalcar, Thoms. 
(3) 10. Stigma infuscate, usually testaceous towards its 
inner angle. 
(14) 11. Third segment dull, finely aciculate. 
(13) 12. Flagellum subsetaceous; spiracles of basal seg- 
ment small ; 6. excubitor, Fal. 
(12) 13. Flagellum subfiliform ; spiracles of basal segment 
prominent . ‘ 7. tenwicornis, Thoms. 
(11) 14. Third segment nitidulous and subglabrous. 
(18) 15. Stigma of 3 infuscate; terebra one-third of abdomen. 
(17) 16. Second cubital cell and stigma of normal size 
8. vestigator, Hal. 
(16) 17. Second cubital cell small and shorter than stigma 
9. stegmaticus, Marsh. 
(15) 18. Stigma of g bicoloured; terebra half length of 
abdomen . : . 10. umbratilis, Hal. 
1. Clinocentrus exsertor, Nees. 
The first seems the commonest species of this uncommon 
genus, and has a range from Italy to Russia and Sweden. It 
has been bred from a somewhat common Tortricid moth; but I 
have seen only ten specimens, of which one pair was taken at 
Greenings, in Surrey, in June, 1871 (Wilson Saunders) ; another 
at Felden in Herts. (Piffard) : Botusfleming, Cornworthy and 
Nunton (Marshall) ; and I took a single female on the flowers of 
Cherophyllum sylvestre on June 9th, 1900, at Wortham, in 
Suffolk. 
2. Clinocentrus cunctator, Hal. 
Known only from Belgivm outside Britain till 1892; now 
recorded from France and Sweden. I have a single female, 
captured some twenty years ago at Felden by the late Albert 
Piffard. 
3. Clinocentrus striolatus, Thoms. 
An addition to the British list. A single female, with 
peculiarly refuscent mesothorax, occurred to me in a sandy 
lane near the Suffolk coast at Alderton on September 3rd, 1899, 
on the flower-tables of Faniculum vulgare. It was described 
from Sweden. 
4. Clinocentrus gracilipes, Thoms. 
This is my other new British species, formerly much mixed 
with C. cunctator, as Rev. T. A. Marshall actually named a 2 
captured on August 21st, 1900, at Appledore by Alfred Beau- 
mont. Another ? was taken by Wilson Saunders during May, 
1872, at Greenings, in Surrey. 
