38 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
5. PAROODERELLA SEMITECTA new species. 
Female:—Of the same stature and so forth as semiputata but differing in having the 
scape concolorous, valves of ovipositor not extruded, brownish at tip, the silvery white band 
of the abdomen distinct, the very small wings longer, fuscous with a rather broad central 
hyaline cross-stripe as long as the proximal fuscous part, longer than the distal fuscous portion 
(in semiputata the minute wings are mostly uncolored, fuscous at base). Otherwise about the 
same; antennal segmentation the same. 
From one female taken November 8, 1913 by sweeping forest. 
Habitat: Stewart’s Creek (Townsville), Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 2901, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the female on a tag with type 
flavithoraz. 
A second female at Pentland, Queensland, forest in early September. The caudal 
margins of abdominal segments are not incised. 
6. PAROODERELLA FLAVITHORAX new species of Girault and A. P. Dodd. 
Female :—Length, 3 mm. 
Head dark metallic green, the thorax, legs, scape, pedicel, ring-joint and first three 
funicle joints, honey yellow; rest of antenna black; abdomen dark purple, with a broad, 
silvery white band around base. Wings vestigial but perfect, reaching to end of proximal third 
of the abdomen, with a rather broad band of fuscous across apical edge and another much 
broader one a short distance proximad from distal part of submarginal and proximal two 
thirds of marginal veins. Scutellum densely scaly, the seutum polished, the axille scaly, the 
head less so. Caudal margin of abdominal segments slightly incised at meson, the abdomen 
reticulated, the third segment smoother. Eyes practically naked. Antenne 13-jointed, with 
one large ring-joint, the club long, 3-jointed; pedicel subequal to funicle 3 which is longest 
of the funicle, 1 slightly shorter, 2 a little shorter than 1 which is subequal to 4, the distal 
joint slightly longer than wide. Hind tibial spurs double, much unequal, the first tarsal joint 
long and slender. 
Male :—Not known. 
Described from one female captured by sweeping in jungle, November 15, 1913 (A.P.D.). 
Habitat: Harvey’s Creek (Cairns), Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 2902, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the above specimen on a tag. 
GENUS CERAMBYCOBIUS Ashmead. 
1. CERAMBYCOBIUS PAX Girault. Female. 
Length, 4 mm., exclusive of the long ovipositor which is curved downward and is a little 
longer than the abdomen. 
Metallic green, abdomen and scutellum purple, ovipositor brown, its sheaths black; 
antenne dark purple; tibie# brown except above, tarsi brown. Fore wings deeply infuscated, 
the fumation divided through the middle by a clear line. Postmarginal vein nearly twice the 
length of the stigmal. Posterior tibie with one spur. Face deeply excavated above antenne, 
the excavation smooth and shining, the cephalic ocellus distant from it, the lateral ocelli closer 
to cephalic one than to eye margins; before the cephalic ocellus a subquadrate, smooth 
depression and a fovea behind each lateral ocellus; vertex rather coarsely punctate; eyes with 
barely perceptible hairs, practically naked. Body with sculpture like that of Tetrastichus. 
Axille just touching inwardly. Seape extending far beyond the vertex, foliaceously dilated or 
compressed but not convexly, the foliation uniform and distinct; first funicle joint shorter 
than the pedicel, not much longer than wide, second and third joints longest, subequal, longer 
