352 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
punctate and with sparse white pubescence. Abdominal petiole with longitudinal carine, far 
apart. Fore wings practically naked, without marginal cilia. First funicle joint longest; 
others more or less subquadrate, the club long, conical. 
Habitat: Capeville (Pentland), Queensland. Forest, January 8, 1913. 
Type: No. Hy 3426, Queensland Museum, Brisbane. Tag and slide. 
2. CHALCITELLOIDES NIGRITHORAX new species. Female. 
Length, 2.60 mm. 
Black but like the type species (nigriscutuwm) except that only the scape, pedicel and 
first four funicle joints are red; abdomen blood red but black above and along upper half 
of each side (a little proximad of middle), the petiole black; tegule and legs (except coxe) 
blood red, the hind femur with a large rounded black spot centrally. Antenne 11-jointed, 
proximal club joint shorter than the other or distal one. Fore wings lightly stained. Funicle 
joints after the first wider than long, the rather indistinctly sutured first club joint shorter 
than the other joint of that part; joints of funicle widening distad, the flagellum clavate. 
Punctures of thorax not densely confluent, separated. (Median carina of propodeum not 
distinetly seen.) 
Habitat: Proserpine, Queensland. November 4, 1912. 
Type: No. Hy 3427, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the female on a tag, the head and 
a fore and hind leg on a slide. 
3. CHALCITELLOIDES IO new species. 
Female:—Like the genotype but the black spot in the center of the hind femur out- 
wardly is larger and reaches the upper margin; the proximal club joint is shorter, plainly wider 
than long and plainly less than half of the distal joint (subquadrate and over half of the 
distal joint in the genotype); the first funicle joint is shorter, only slightly longer than wide 
(distinctly longer than wide in the genotype) and the small, round impunetate area at the 
base of each parapside is more conspicuous and somewhat larger. 
From one female captured by sweeping foliage of lantana, October 21, 1911. 
Habitat: Mackay, Queensland. 
Type: No. Hy 3428, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen on a tag and a slide 
with appendages. 
TRIBE DIRRHININI. 
GENUS ENIACELLA Girault. 
Like Eniaca Kirby but the antenne 13-jointed, with one ring-joint, club 3-jointed. 
Postmarginal and stigmal veins very short, the latter sessile. Posterior femora beneath with 
comblike teeth preceded by a single moderate-sized tooth. Abdominal petiole short. Meta- 
thorax with teeth laterally and ventrally. Ring-joint split transversely at middle. Corrected 
description. 
1. ENIACELLA RUFRICORNIS Girault. Male; female. Genotype. 
Length, 3.85 mm. 
Black, the antenne and first two pairs of legs reddish, the posterior legs black, all 
tarsi yellow. Fore wings stained. Punctate. Scutellum simple. Tegule reddish. The second 
abdominal segment is longitudinally striate dorsad at base (about seven strie), the segment 
reaching nearly to tip. The propodeum bears strong interlacing carine, the petiole has six 
dorsal carina. Cephalic third of scutum finely polygonally scaly. There is a stout tooth 
ventrad from petiole. The striated area on segment 2 is subquadrate but somewhat longer than 
wide, the distal margin subtruncate. A small area in center of scutellum is glabrous. 
Pubescence not conspicuous. A row of stout teeth on venter just cephaiad of hind coxe. Type 
re-examined. 
