Australian Proctotrypoidea, with Descriptions of Forty-five new Species. 3 
Hab.: North Queensland (Nelson, near Cairns). Described 
from one @ caught by sweeping along jungle-edged streamlet in 
forest, 9th September, 1913 (A. P. Dodd). Named in honor of Mr. 
R. C. L. Perkins for his useful work on the Australian Dryinidae. 
Type: aQ on a tag. 
Subfamily Gonatopodinae. 
Genus Chaleogonatopus Perkins. 
Chalcogonatopus albiscapus Sp. noVv. 
Q Length, about 6 mm. 
Black; the clypeus, mandibles, junction of 2nd and 3rd an- 
tennal joints, and the tarsi (except basal joint of anterior pair), 
ferruginous or testaceous; antennal scape silvery white, margined 
with black. Mandibles 4-dentate. Maxillary palpi 6-jointed, 
labials 3-jointed (?). Antennae long and slender, the 3rd joint 
much the longest, the 4th much longer than the scape. Body 
and legs with rather spare, white, erect hairs. Thorax densely 
reticulate-punctate, the mesonotum cephalad smooth. Abdomen 
wholly finely densely granulate, and with fine polygonal, scaly 
reticulation. 
Hab.: North Queensland (Nelson, near Cairns). Described 
from one ® caught in forest, 27th January, 1914 (A. P. Dodd). 
Type: a® ona tag, the head on a slide. 
Family SCELIONIDAE. 
Subfamily Telenominae. 
Genus Telenomus Haliday. 
1. Telenomus ogyges Dodd. 
A female of this species was caught by sweeping in forest, 
Nelson, near Cairns, 4th August, 1913 (A. P. Dodd). 
2. Telenomus eetion Sp. noVv. 
2 Length, 2.35 mm. The largest Australian species of the 
genus. 
Very like oecleus Dodd but differs as follows: the legs in 
oecleus are golden yellow, in eetion they are deep reddish yellow; 
the first six antennal joints in ovecleus are golden yellow, in eetion 
the scape is reddish yellow, the next four joints suffused with red; 
the pedicel is longer, two and a half times as long as wide, the 
1st funicle joint being longer than it, and three times as long as 
wide; the 2nd club joint is distinctly wider than long; the fore- 
wings extend barely beyond apex of abdomen; the venation is 
bright yellow; the blade of the stigmal vein is much broader, and 
the stigmal knob is scarcely distinct; also the 2nd abdominal 
segment is longitudinally rugulose, (in oecleus it is finely longitu- 
dinally striate). Head, scutum, and scutellum, coarsely rugulose. 
& Antennae as in oecleus but the 1st funicle joint is almost 
three times as long as wide. 
1b 9. Heft 
