146 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
in Wanstead Park, Warley, and Blackmore at rest on P. syl- 
vestris.”’ 
Seeing that both species feed in exactly the same way, and 
that EH. buoliana, as both Mr. Fletcher and I have learned to 
our disappointment, is certainly no less fond than its close ally 
of the leading shoots of the Scots pine, and is infinitely more 
numerous than it in each of the six English counties mentioned 
above, one is certainly justified in asking for some proof of the 
accuracy of the reviewer’s statement. 
Norden, Corfe Castle: April 14th, 1909. 
DESCRIPTIONS OF TWO NEW SPECIES OF MUTILLA 
FROM KUCHING, BORNEO. 
By P. Cameron. 
Mutilla annexa, sp. nov. 
Black, the basal two abdominal segments and the basal fourth 
of the third, red; the head and thorax densely covered with white 
pubescence, the metanotum being also covered with a white de- 
pressed pile; the base of abdomen sparsely covered with white hair ; 
the apex of the second, third, and middle of fourth fringed with 
longish white hair; the sides of the third and the apices of the 
following segments thickly fringed with stiff black hair. Wings 
almost hyaline, the nervures black; the first abscissa of radius 
straight, obliquely sloped, about one-fourth longer than the second, 
which is a little shorter than the third; the first transverse cubital 
nervure rounded, oblique; the second broadly rounded outwardly ; 
the first transverse cubital nervure is received very shortly before the 
middle of the cellule. Tegule black on the inner side, the outer 
(and larger) part rufo-testaceous. Keel on basal ventral segment 
straight. Pygidium rather strongly and closely punctured. ¢. 
Length, 9 mm. 
Kuching, Borneo (John Hewitt, B.A.). 
Vertex on either side of the ocellar region finely, closely, obliquely 
striated; the ocellar region smooth, raised; bordered by a narrow 
furrow. Front sparsely punctured; a smooth, shallow furrow down 
the lower half. Antennal scape furrowed below, the sides of the 
furrow keeled. The basal two joints of the flagellum are not much 
longer than the third united. Occiput broadly rounded. Pro- and 
mesothorax strongly, but not very closely punctured ; the scutellum 
is more coarsely rugosely punctured. Metanotum reticulated; the 
basal area has the apical half narrowed, about half the length of the 
basal part ; the bordering keels are more or less curved. 
Allied to M. attila, Cam.; the latter is a larger species, has 
the wings distinctly dark fuscous, the tegule black, the basal 
abscissa of the radius is curved, not straight, the first recur- 
