2.00 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
mandibles with a very obscure reddish spot; face broad, orbits 
practically parallel; scape with a narrow red stripe in front; 
flagellum dark; tegule piceous; wings strongly reddened; meso- 
thorax very smooth, polished; hair of hind tibiz and tarsi rufo- 
fulvous. 
Hab. THaglehawk Neck, 8.-E. Tasmania, February 12th- 
March 8rd, 1913 (R. E. Turner). Two females. British Museum. 
Allied to EH. hamulata, but distinguished by the entirely black 
face. It is perhaps not more than a local race of hamulata. 
Exoneura angophore occidentalis, subsp. n. 
@. Length 63-7 mm.; face wholly without light markings; 
face narrowed below; scape red or yellowish-red in front; wings 
reddish ; anterior and middle femora above, and below apically, and 
their tibiz and tarsi entirely, bright ferruginous; hind legs black, 
the femora and tibiz narrowly red at apex; hind tibize and tarsi 
with much fuscous hair; basal segment of abdomen black except the 
apical margin, the hind border of the black obtusely bilobed; second 
segment with a broad biundulate dusky band. 
Hab. Yallingup, 8.-W. Australia, September 14th—October 
31st, 19138 (R. EK. Turner). Four females. British Museum. 
Mr. Meade-Waldo notes :—‘‘ Not H. bicolor; differs in colour of 
hind legs, &c.”’ It is, however, so close to H. angophore that I 
treat it as a subspecies. 
Hexoneura insularis, sp. n. 
2. Length about 6 mm.; black, including the abdomen; orbits 
moderately converging below; clypeal and lateral marks cream- 
colour; clypeus with a very broad median band, which suddenly 
broadens above, so as to include all of upper part of clypeus; lateral 
marks rather small, subtriangular; scape with a red mark near base, 
and one at apex; flagellum thick, very obscure reddish beneath ; 
tubercles black, with white hair; pleura and sides of metathorax 
with thin white hair; tegule piceous; wings reddish, nervures and 
the large stigma dull ferruginous; legs black, anterior tibize obscure 
reddish at base and subapically ; hair of hind tibize and tarsi black ; 
abdomen very broad. 
Hab. Stradbroke Island, Queensland, September 24th, 1906 
(W. W. Froggatt, 155). Allied to H. botanica, but easily sepa- 
rated by the lateral face-marks and dark tubercles. 
Allodape bribiensis, sp. n. 
?. Length about 4 mm.; black, the abdomen dullish, not 
shining as in A. wnicolor; eyes greyish-green; clypeus with a broad 
white vertical bar, narrowest at top, and gradually widening down- 
wards; scape black ; flagellum ferruginous beneath, except at base ; 
mesothorax shining ; tegule testaceous; wings moderately dusky ; 
nervures and stigma dusky reddish; tubercles white; anterior 
femora with two white spots at apex, their tibia brown with a 
white line on outer side; middle tibize with a white spot at base; 
