44 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
Habitat: Gordonvale (Cairns), Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 2915, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the above specimen with types of 
quadricolor. 
A very similar and common species occurs in the grass of forests at Capeville (Pent- 
land), Queensland. It differs in having the marginal stripe of abdomen complete, thinner 
distad than proximad and the distal half of scape white. A minute dot against marginal stripe 
of abdomen at apex of proximal two thirds.* 
3. EUPELMOMORPHA BICOLOR new species. 
Female :—Length, 1.45 mm. 
Similar to tricolor but smaller, the legs are all concolorous with each other and the 
marginal stripe of abdomen ends at distal fourth, that is, is somewhat shorter. Also the 
funicle joints are shorter, 2 longest, the others subequal or nearly and a little shorter than 2. 
From one female captured by sweeping in forest, January 2, 1913 (A. P. Dodd). 
Habitat: Gordonvale (Cairns), Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 2916, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen with types of quadri- 
color. 
GEeNuS TANEOSTIGMODES Ashmead. 
1. TANEOSTIGMODES GLOBOSUS new species. 
Female :—Length, 1.80 mm. Robust. 
Black, the abdomen and legs (except cox) intense lemon yellow, the dorsum of abdo- 
men with four broad, regular dusky cross-stripes evenly distributed from base to apex. Antenne: 
black, the pedicel and first ring-joint whitish, the former dusky above at proximal half, the 
scape greatly foliaceously dilated; funicle 1 a little longer than wide, a little longer than the 
pedicel, 6 a little wider than long; antenne 13-jointed with one ring-joint. Axilla just meet- 
ing, the scutellum acute caudad, longitudinally lineolated; scutum, axillae and parapsides trans- 
versely lineolated. Parapsidal furrows meeting just a little before tip, complete. Stigmal and 
postmarginal veins long, subequal, as in Hucomys, the marginal distinctly longer than either; 
wings hyaline, densely ciliate discally (fore wings). Mandibles tridentate, the third tooth 
broadly truncate. Hind tibial spurs single. Face normal. Abdomen stout, as long as the 
rest of the body, the ovipositor not exserted. 
From one female caught in forest, April 9, 1914. 
Habitat: Gordonvale (Cairns), Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 2917, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the female on a tag; head, middle 
and hind tibiz on a slide. 
A, TANEOSTIGMODES GLOBOSUS NOVUS new variety. 
The same but the pedicel wholly white, the abdomen with faint cross-stripes, the cephalic 
femur dusky dorsad and the sclerite just cephalad of the mesopleurum margined with golden 
yellow. Also the funicle joints are all a little longer. 
From one female caught May 13, 1914 by sweeping forest on sand-ridges near coast. 
(A. P. Dodd). 
Habitat: Chindera (Tweed River), New South Wales.+ 
Type: No. Hy 2918, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen on a tag with type 
globosus. 
2. TANEOSTIGMODES BIFASCIATIFRONS new species. 
Female:—Similar to globosus but the following parts golden or pale yellow: Pro- 
pleurum, tegule, cox (except middle cox), mesopleurum (deep orange) and ventral half of 
face (but not the cheeks). Ventral half of face with a rather broad, longitudinal stripe down 
* Eupelmomorpha hawthornei new species. A female type in alcohol. September. Queensland Museum. 
7 Also a female by sweeping in forest along the banks of the Hawkesbury River at Brooklyn, 
N.S.W., November 14, 1914. 
