Australian Proctotrypoidea, with Descriptions of Forty five new Species. 9 
frons smooth; vertex somewhat depressed, ‚with fine polygonal 
scaly sculpture. Thorax one-half longer than wide; scutum with 
fine polygonal scaly sculpture; scutellumsmooth. Abdomen pointed 
ovate; nearly twice as long as the head and thorax united; no wider 
than the thorax; 1st segment rather short, striate; 2nd segment 
occupying one-third of surface, with fine polygonal scaly sculpture. 
Antennae 11-jointed; scape rather long and slender; pedicel one- 
half longer than wide; 1st funicle joint a little shorter and narrower 
than the pedicel; 2nd as long as 1st; club 5-jointed, joints 1—4 
each a little wider than long. Forewings reaching to two-thirds 
- length of abdomen; narrow, the apex pointed; hyaline; longest 
marginal cilia equal to one-half greatest wing width; discal cilia 
fine, not very dense; submarginal vein attaining costa before 
middle of wing; marginal vein one-half longer than the stigmal, 
which is short, rather oblique; postmarginal twice as long as the 
marginal. 
Hab.: North Queensland (Kuranda, near Cairns). Described 
from one ? caught by sweeping in a forest pocket, 1500 feet, 12th 
September, 1913 (A. P. Dodd). 
Type: a@ ona tag, the head and forewings on a slide. 
The Type and only specimen has a deep longitudinal groove 
or channel, running down meson of scutum and scutellum; this 
channel appears quite normal, and the specimen does not appear 
deformed. Further specimens, however, are needed to prove the 
stability of this character. 
2. Phanurus nigricorpus Dodd, Transactions Royal Society of 
South Australia, vol. XXXVII, 1913, pp. 160—1. 
I have a second female of this species, caught by sweeping in 
forest, Nelson, near Cairns, 29th November, 1912. I herewith 
amend and add to the original description. Coxae black, femora 
blackish, tibiae and tarsi yellow; head and thorax nearly smotth, 
but with scattered setigerous pin-punctures; abdomen wholly 
smooth, 2nd segment occupying one-half of the surface, and with 
a semicircular row of foveae near its base dorsad; forewings rather 
broad, broader than in the other Australian species, and with a 
longer stigmal vein. 
Genus Neotelenomus Dodd. 
1. Neotelenomus pulchricornis sp. nov. 
® Length, 1.15 mm. 
Shining black; legs (except cephalic coxae), and first five an- 
tennal joints lemon yellow. 
Very like dallidicornis Dodd but the 1st funicle joint is distinct- 
ly longer than the pedicel; the 2nd is distinctly longer than wide; 
marginal vein shorter, scarcely one-fourth as long as the stigmal, 
which is distinctly shorter than in Jallidicornis, the blade paddle- 
shaped (of uniform thickness in pallidicornis); marginal vein fully 
twice as long as the stigmal. 
9. Heft 
