AUSTRALIAN HYMEKOPTFEA CHALCIDOIDEA, I.—GIBAVLT. 145 



Antennal club stout. Pedicel thrice the length of the distinctly wider than long funicle joint. 

 Hind wings slender, curved, three lines of discal cilia, the caudal one faint. 



Male: — Not known. 



Described from one female taken in the forest, April 15, 1911. 



Habitat: Gordonvale (Cairns). Queensland. 



Type: No. Hy24S5, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen on a slide. 



PAROLIGOSITA new subgenus of Girault and A. P. Dodd. 

 Femalt : — The same as Oligosita but the second division of the club is absent, the 

 club but 2-jointed. the second joint twice the length of the first. 

 Male: — Not known. 

 Type: The following species. 



1. PAROLIGOSITA BICLAVATA new species. 

 Female: — Length, about 0.55 mm. 



Agrees with the description of Oligosita australiensis Girault but the knob of the stigmal 

 vein is dusky, the longest marginal fringes of the fore wing are somewhat shorter than the 

 greatest width of those wings and the scutum bears a median sulcus. Funicle joint quadrate. 

 Hind wings missing. 



Described from one female taken from a window, February 17. 1913. 



Habitat: Ingham, Queensland. 



Type: No. Hy 3453, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the above specimen on a slide with 

 the type Arrhenophagoidea coloripes. 



Genus UFENS Girault. 



1. UFENS ALBITIBLE new species. 



Female: — Length, 0.70 mm. 



Differs from flavipes in having the discal ciliation of the fore wing denser, only a few 

 of the lines standing out distinctly somewhat as in piceipes; and also in having all of the 

 femora black. Fore wings with about 25 lines of discal cilia. 



Malt : — Not known. 



Described from one female captured by sweeping miscellaneous vegetation along the 

 banks of the Pioneer River, October 15, 1911. 



Habitat: Mackay, Queensland. 



Type: No. Hy?l?6, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the above specimen on a slide. 



2. UFENS QUADRIFASCIATUS new species. 



Female: — Like flavipes Girault in wings and color of the legs but at once distinguished 

 from it and all other species by the color of the abdomen which is black with four encircling 

 stripes of white distributed over the surface. These white bands appear to be the incisions 

 between the segments but they were present when the insect was captured and are not due 

 to pressure after mounting. In other species of the genus I could not make them appear after 

 application of pressure to the mounts. 



Male: — Not known. 



Described from one female captured in jungle pocket, April 2, 1914. 



Habitat: Gordonvale (Cairns), Queensland. 



Type: No. HyS4S7, Queensland Museum. Brisbane, the specimen on a slide. 



3. UFENS BINOTATUS new species. 

 Female: — Like the preceding but besides the vertex, the mesoscutum, scutellum and 

 postscutellnm are orange yellow, the scutum with a rather large spindle-shaped black marking 



K 



