AUSTRALIAN HYMENOPTERA CHALCIDOIDEA, X.—GIRAULT. 229 
From one female on a eard labelled ‘‘Taken from nest of ant Eetatomma. Fern Tree 
Gully, 8-3-11. F. P. Spry.’’ 
Habitat: Melbourne, Victoria. 
Type: In the National Museum, Melbourne, the female on a card. 
2. TRICORYNA SUBSALEBROSA new species. 
Male :—Length, 3.50 mm. 
Black, finely, densely rugulose except the caudal portion of each parapside which is 
glabrous. Cephalic tibia brown. Wings hyaline, the postmarginal vein long. Scutum and 
seutellum with a median groove, wider and coarser on the former. Abdomen finer in sculpture 
than the rest of the body. Legs thick, the front tibie slender but not long, the thick first 
tarsal joint in hind legs not quite half the length of the hind tarsus. Axille meeting inwardly. 
Quite as figured by Haliday. The scape and pedicel are so short that the long first funicle 
joint appears to be the scape. Antenne 10-jointed; scape very short, somewhat longer than 
wide, pedicel much wider than long; funicle 1 elongate, thrice the length of the scape, about 
twice the length of the next joint; joints following funicle 1 shortening in suecession, all the 
funicle joints narrower at base; club not differentiated, the last antennal joint smallest after 
the pedicel, subglobular. Flagelium hispid but not uniformly. Secutellum blunt at apex, 
slightly overhanging the propodeum. Petiole long, striate, about as long as in ectatomme. 
From one male captured by H. Hacker, January 17, 1913. 
Habitat: Brisbane, Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 2286, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the above specimen on a tag, an 
antenna on a slide. 
8. TRICORYNA IELLO (Walker). Male ; female. 
Eucharis iello Walker, 1839, pp. 12-13. 
GENUS EUCHAROMORPHA Girault. 
Somewhat like Psilogaster Blanchard but the antenne 11- to 12-jointed, with a true ring- 
joint, the funicle joints cylindrical to subquadrate; postmarginal vein distinct, also the 
venation; scutellum with a cross-furrow before apex. Abdomen subsessile, the petiole extremely 
short or absent. Parapsidal furrows deep, the parapsides somewhat gibbous, also the axille. 
Head not striated, the ocelli in a small triangle. Club solid. 
1. EUCHAROMORPHA VIRIDIS Girault Female. Genotype. 
Length, 4 mm. 
Bright metallic eneous green, the cox concolorous, the legs straw-yellow, the antennae 
black but with the scape and ring-joint honey-yellow, the pedicel more or less so. Venation 
brown. Wings subhyaline. Antenne 12-jointed, the first funicle joint long, twice the length 
of the pedicel, the second a third shorter, the others subquadrate and more or less equal; club 
joint conical ovate, subequal to first funicle joint. Head and thorax rugulose, subpunctate, 
not rude. Abdomen robust, sessile. 
Habitat: Swansea, Tasmania. 
Type: No. I. 1283, South Australian Museum, Adelaide. 
2. EUCHAROMORPHA FUSCIPES Girault. Male. 
Length, 3.87 mm. 
The same as the preceding but more slender, the femora along proximal half fuscous 
and with more or less metallic green, the abdomen with a distinct but short petiole, the 
