1910] Girault and Sanders — Chalcidoid Parasites 115 
fourth and fifth are subquadrate and subequal, the second and third sub- 
equal, longer than wide and the first the longest joint of the funicle, about 
a third longer than the fourth or fifth; the basal joint of the club sub- 
quadrate but slightly longer and wider than the fourth or fifth funicle 
joints; the intermediate joint wider than long, and the apical joint obtusely 
conical, slightly larger than the third ring-joint; but a single row of hispid 
hairs on each joint of the funicle and club, in balsam mounts of anten- 
ne appearing as white longitudinal ridges (Fig. 1). 
Mandibles 3- (left) and 4-dentate (right), in the former case, the inner 
mesal tooth is truncate and shortest, the two others acute, the lateral tooth 
longest; in the latter case, the three inner (mesal) teeth small, obtuse and 
subequal, the lateral outer tooth much longer, obtusely conic (Fig. 2). 
From fourteen specimens. 
Male. Length, variable, averaging 1.60 mm. The same, more neous 
metallic, the sculpture coarser, the body more slender, the antennz pilose- 
pubescent, inserted nearer to the middle of the face, distinctly above 
(dorsad) of an imaginary line drawn between the ventral ends of the eyes, 
but not half way up the eye margins, the face more convex; antennal 
scrobes deep, margined, running vertically nearly to the cephalic ocellus and 
nearly confluent at the meson, the medial impression not as noticeable as 
in the female; genal sulcus present, but very faint, narrow; the abdomen 
more distinctly petiolate and depressed, obconic, broadly truncate caudad, 
the second segment longest, covering two thirds of the surface, the ab- 
domen widest at its apex, the third segment about a half shorter and the 
remaining ones hidden within; genitalia exserted in death; abdomen, in- 
cluding the petiole, not quite as long as the thorax, slightly concave dorsad, 
slightly convex ventrad; petiole not coarsely rugose. 
Antenne the same in general, but more slender, the flagellum cylindrical; 
club somewhat narrower than the funicle, the scape slightly curved, not 
tapering distad, cylindrical, not as long in proportion to the flagellum, 
less than half its length and not quite as long as the funicle; pedicel large 
but not as long as the united lengths of the third ring-joint and first funi- 
cle joint; the proximal ring-joint smaller than the intermediate one; all 
funicle joints longer than wide and subequal; the third ring-joint is sub- 
quadrate, yet longer than wide and about half the length of any one of the 
funicle joints and longer than the united lengths of the two proximal ring- 
joints; first funicle joint not noticeably longer than the fifth; club cylindri- 
cal, its first two joints subequal, longer than wide, somewhat shorter than 
funicle five, the apical joint conical, a:fourth shorter than the basal joints, 
At least three rows of pilose hairs on funicle joints one to five and the three 
club joints and two rows on the third ring-joint; a few short hairs on the 
dorsal aspect of the pedicel, the two proximal ring-joints and scape naked. 
Mandibles as in the female; the distal joint of the maxillary palpi twice 
longer than any of the three remaining joints, which are all subequal and 
