94 Psyche [June 
Eutelus salicis sp. nov. 
Female: Length, 2.15 mm. Like the preceding but much larger, 
the pedicel is entirely reddish yellow and larger (also the first two 
ring-joints; funicle 1 is about twice longer than wide), the femora 
reddish yellow; the clypeus is not incised but broadly sinuate or 
concaved; the abdomen is longer and stylate, not sunken, the ~ 
antenne inserted barely below the ventral ends of the eyes; the 
propodeum is about as in Habrocytus onerati and the marginal vein 
is somewhat larger. Differs from H. onerati (Fitch) mostly in that 
the flagellum is black, the antennze with three ring-joints and 
somewhat lower on the face. 
From three females reared from a conical Cecidomyid gall on 
Salix longifolia, Melrose, Mass., January 20, 1882 (U. 5. Depart- 
ment Agriculture). 
Types: Catalogue No. 20788, U.S. National Museum, the three 
females, minutien-mounted and a slide bearing caudal tibize and a 
head. 
Achrysocharella pulchrella sp. nov. 
Female: Length, 1.00 mm. Bright orange yellow, the abdomen 
somewhat paler, the wings hyaline, the body marked with dark 
metallic blue as follows: Pronotum, cephalic half of scutum, a dot 
on each side, center of occiput, a tolerably broad stripe across the 
base of the abdomen, followed immediately by a narrow cross- 
stripe and then at intervals equal to the basal stripe (except in the 
first instance) by four sometimes thicker cross-stripes, the last one 
of which is at base of distal third. Legs, scape and pedicel, white, 
the funicle and club dusky. Tip of ovipositor valves black. Head 
and thorax very finely punctate, the propodeum and abdomen 
scaly. Propodeum plane, with a median carina and a oblique 
carina just laterad of the rounded spiracle. Scutellum with a 
seta on each side of the middle, somewhat flattened. Post- 
marginal vein shorter than the stigmal. Terminal spine of the 
club as long as its joint; pedicel, funicles 1-2 and club 1 subequal, 
twice longer than wide; club 2 somewhat shorter, 3 still shorter. 
Club narrowing distad. Mandibles with two acute outer teeth and 
a third inner which is rather broadly truncate at apex and there 
with minute teeth. Parapsidal furrows barely indicated cephalad. 
Habitus of the Australia grandis. 
