78 Psyche [August 



and at the cross-veins. The first submarginal is longer and a Uttle 

 narrower than the second posterior, its stem about one-half the 

 length of the cell. The basal cross-vein not quite its length from 

 the anterior. The scales are dark brown, somewhat truncate on 

 the costa, the first long vein and the stem of the fifth, otherwise 

 they are long narrow lanceolate. Halteres have light stem and 

 dark knobs. 



Length (abdomen 4 mm., body 7 mm., proboscis 3 mm., wing 

 6 mm.). 



Taken, Selenga, Siberia, July 10, 1919, by First Lieut. J. P. 

 Kopecky, M.G., U. S. Army (A. E. F.-S.) and described from tw^o 

 females sent with specimens of Anopheles leivisi, described above. 

 It is quite in the possibilities that this may prove to be only a varia- 

 tion, of lewisi, but as the Anophelines of this region are not well 

 known it has seemed worth while to describe it. 



NOTES AND DESCRIPTIONS OF SPECIES OF 



TELENOMUS HAVING TEN-JOINTED ANTENNA 



(HYMENOPTERA; SCELIONID.E) 



By a. M. Wilcox,! 

 Gipsy Moth Assistant, U. S. Bureau of Entomology. 



Wliile working over a collection of Proctotrypoid parasites during 

 the winter of 1918-19, I found many specimens of Telenomus with 

 the females having only ten antennal joints. These were separated 

 into three species. 



The following two species appear to be new to science and their 

 descriptions are herewith presented. In the form of the abdomen 

 they resemble Phanurus but the head is transverse and not quad- 

 rate or subquadrate as typical of that genus. They are, therefore, 

 placed in Telenomus. 



Telenomus hemerocampae sp. no v. 



Female. Length l.'io mm. Black, shining; the legs, except the 

 coxse, dusky yellow, upper sides of femora slightly darker, especially 

 the posterior pair; wings hyaline, ciliated; head about three times 

 as wide as thick as seen from above. Ocelli in a curved line, the 

 lateral ones nearly touching the margin of the eyes, the median 



' The writer desires to express his thanks to Prof. C. T. Brues of the Bussey Institution, Har- 

 vard University, for his valuable assistance in the preparation of this paper, for the loan of 

 specimens and for the examination and comparison of the species treated. 



