104 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
2. CHRYSOPOPHAGUS PURPUREICINCTUS new species. 
Female:—Length, 2 mm. Ovipositor slightly extruded, silvery white. 
Orange yellow, the scutum with a tolerably broad (over distal half) purple band across 
its caudal margin. Abdomen purplish across base and at apex dorsad and laterad and half 
way down lateral margins from base. Coxe, knees, tarsi and tips of hind tibize silvery white. 
Caudal tibia, funicle and club purple. One side of apex of joints 1-5 of funicle pale yellowish. 
Pedicel longer than any of the funicle joints of which 1, 3 and 4 are longest, 4 wider than 1 
and 3, compressed; 5 and 6 still wider, barely longer than wide; 1 a half longer than wide. 
Caudal tibial spurs double. Fore wings about as in mazzinini but more darkly infuscated, the 
pair of hyaline areas at apex of venation larger, the base of the wings more broadly infuscated, 
the distinct concave curve of the submarginal vein distad is more pronounced and the infusca- 
tion is accented over the discal cilia proximad of the hairless line. Also, the stigmal vein is 
twice longer, the postmarginal only slightly shorter than it. Besides coloration, differs from 
mazzinini in having the antenne less compressed, the ocelli in a flat triangle (isosceles in the 
other species, or nearly), the mandibles stouter. Axille with a carina between them. Purple 
band of scutum with silvery pubescence. Disk of scutellum lemon yellow. Thorax sealy. 
Scutum wider than long, shorter than scutellum. 
From one female caught in forest, July 27, 1914. 
Habitat: Gordonvale (Cairns), Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 3023, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen on a tag; head, fore 
wing and hind tibiz with slide type of Owneyrtus bicolor Girault. 
GENUS COCCIDENCYRTUS Ashmead. 
1. COCCIDENCYRTUS BICOLORICORNIS new species. 
Female :—Length, 0.75 mm. 
Purplish black, the wings hyaline; distal half of middle tibix, tips of other tibia, 
knees and tarsi yellowish white; tip of scape and first four funicle joints white. 
Anteunwe inserted at the mouth border, the scrobes long, the head rounded, the cheeks 
longer than the eyes, the frons moderate; antenne capitate, the club large and appearing 
somewhat topheavy, thick, oval, three fourths as long as the funicle, the joints of the latter 
gradually enlarging distad, all wider than long, 1 shortest, the pedicel twice its length yet 
only a little longer than wide. Club truncate at apex. Mandibles rather long, with three rather 
small, subequal, acute teeth at apex, the middle tooth longest. Scape long, subcompressed. 
Marginal vein pnnetiform, the postmarginal as long as the marginal, the stigmal of moderate 
iength, about two and a half times longer than the marginal, thus not long. Scutellum densely, 
longitudinally striate but at tip abruptly scaly and metallic green. Seutum and head obscurely 
punctate. Abdomen short, depressed, triangular, the ovipositor not exserted, the surface shining, 
feebly sculptured. Axilles feebly sculptured, slightly separated. 
Male:—The same but the funicle and club honey yellow, the antennew 10-jointed, the 
club solid, longer than the funicle joints which are subquadrate, rather stout, bevelled off a 
little »p one proximal corner and clothed with short, stiff hairs which are not whorled and not 
very tong. Lateral ocellus about its own width from the eye margins. 
From one female, six males labelled ‘‘No. 29. 25-10-13 on Eugenia fruit and flowers. 
Geet) sell??? 
Habitat: Port Darwin, Northern Territory. 
Types: No. Hy 3024, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, four males on a card, one female 
head and three males on a slide. 
Also, one female, forest, Burnett Heads, Queensland, June, 1914 (A. P. Dodd). 
