206 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 



pointed at tip, there the caudal margin bevelled off, curving eonvexly up to the 

 tip of the straight cephalic margin; at this curve the marginal cilia abruptly 

 shorten, otherwise as in the type species, to which evidently it is closely allied. 

 (From one specimen, f-inch objective, 1-inch optic, Bausch and Lomb.) 



Male. — Unknown. 



Described from a single female specimen received from Dr. L. 0. Howard, 

 mounted in balsam, and labelled: ' 923. Perth, W. Austr, G. Compere.' 



Ilabiiai. — West Australia (Perth). 



Type. — Type No. 13,794, United States National Museum, Washington, 

 D.C. ; a single female in balsam." 



The abdomen is conic-ovate. The legs are black, not as described in the 

 table of species in antea. 



OLIGOSITA MINIMA Giiault. 



In the original description, page 77, lines 15 and 18, 65 read 78. 



PSEUDOGRAMMA Girault. 



In the original description, page 88, line 5 of the description, the h)jphen 

 should follow the word ring. 



PAROLIGOSITA Girault. 

 For this genus I propose the new name Epoligosita. Paroligosita 

 Kurjumov is identical with Oligosita Haliday. 



TRICHOGRAMMA MINUTUM Riley. 

 A female on a slide in the U.S. National Museum, labelled " G. Compere, 

 No. 885. Par. on noctuid eggs on Acacia. Swan River, West Australia." 



OLIGOSITA BREVICILIA Girault. 

 The " three pairs of transverse marginal spots" of the original descrip- 

 tion means three spots on each side, a total of six spots. 



Genus PTERYGOGRAMMA Perkins. 



" PTERYGOGRAMMA gen nov. 



Head strongly transverse, ocelli in a triangle with very wide base, the 

 posterior ones touching the eye-margins. Antenna? apparently six-jointed, 

 counting an extremely short ring-joint, the three terminal joints apparently form 

 a widely dilated but pointed club, the terminal joint in some aspects almost 

 ■spinose in appearance ; pedicel widely ovate, the scape also apparently somewhat 

 dilated. Owing to the thinly laminate character of the joints, the antennae are 

 subject to much distortion. Scutellum rather less long than the mesonotum; 

 the metanotum pointed posteriorly and produced over the base of abdomen; 

 the latter elongate and acuminate, twice as long as the thorax, and apparently 

 laterally compressed somewhat like some jMymaridn?; the ovipositor exserted for 

 a length nearly equal to the hind tarsi. Wings with the lines of hairs rather 

 confused, and about 7 or 8 in number, the apical fringe not very long. 



Plate XX, fig. 7. 



