538 PROCEEDINGS OF SECTION D. 
Fam. 43. Psinip@. 
None yet described. There are specimens of Zoxocera or an 
allied genus in the Macleay collection. 
Fam. 44. Muicropezip@. 
Five indigenous species of Calodata, Meig., only have been 
described. This genus is distributed throughout the globe. 
Macquart (Dipt. Exot. Il., part 3rd, 1843, p. 245) seems to 
believe that Wiedemann’s Caloéata albitarsis, described in 1830, 
from Java, is identical with a species found at Cuba, Philadelphia, 
and (Port Jackson) Sydney ; if so, his C. a/dimana, from Java, 
is the same species. 
Calobata occurs throughout Australia and at Lord Howe 
Island. 
Fam. 45. ORTALIDA. 
Twenty-two species, referred to seven genera, are recorded. 
Lamprogaster, Macq., found also in the Phillipine Islands, Java, 
the South Sea Islands, and New Zealand, is represented in Aus- 
tralia by about eight or nine described examples; one of which, 
Lamprogaster strigipennis, described by Macquart as a Tephritis 
(= T7rypeta), is according to Schiner found in New Zealand. 
Walker has described several of our species under the generic 
title Chromatomyia, proposed six years after Macquart’s name. 
Stenopterina, Macq., has five recorded species, mostly Tasmanian ; 
this genus also occurs in America, Java, etc. erina, R. Desv., 
which is widely distributed, has a single species from Tasmania 
(described by Thomson as Hernia). The typical genus Orfalts, 
Fall., is according to our list represented in Australia by four 
species ; probably not one of them is an Orfadis. Besides these 
four genera, the three following, with one species each, are 
regarded as endemic, Campigaster, LEpicerella, and Toxura, 
Macq. 
Fam. 46. TrYPETID®. 
Thirty-two species and three or four genera are doubtfully 
ascribed to Australia. Various authors have characterised species 
which apparently belong to 77y/efa, under no less than four generic 
names (7.e., Acinia, Tephritis, Trupanea, and Urophora), hence no 
doubt the same species have in several instances been described 
under different names. The species described by Macquart as 
Platystoma, Meig., and his genus Zufrosopia (peculiar to Aus- 
tralia) also cannot be trusted. Macquart and Guérin describe 
each a new genus (Cardiacera and Bactrocera respectively) for 
Australian insects, which probably belong to Dacus, Meig.; a. 
third species has been described by Walker under the name 
Dacus. 
