Rev. F. D. Morice's Notes <w Australian Sawflies. 257 



oblique nerve. The hind-wing lias sometimes two closed cells, 



sometimes only one fl4. Caliroa, Costa 



Eriocampa, Auctt. = Eriocampoides, Konow. 



Radial cell undivided. Lanceolate cell with no nerve crossing 



it. but " petiolate." Hind-wing never with more than one 



closed cell (cubital) 15. 



I"). Antennae pectinated as in Pterygophorus but far less closely, 

 the joints (apart from their branches) being longer, in the 

 o of the only described species, viz. P. atratus, W. F. Kirby, 

 the antennae are 18-jointed. The $ is described by Mr. 

 Rohwer in Ann. mid Mag. N. H. (I.e.) from a specimen seen 

 by him in B.M., but this, I fear, has since been destroyed or 

 lost, for neither Mr. Turner nor I have been able to find it. 

 Its antennae were broken from the 12th joint onwards, but 

 each of the remaining joints after the second had *' a. ramus 

 like Pterygophorus." Mr. Rohwer places it in his Subfamily 

 " Euriinae," and compares its wing-veining to that of the 

 American genus Perreyia. (Kirby also brings Perreyia, 

 Eurys and Polyclonus near together, including them all in 

 the " Subfamily " which he calls Lophyridinae.*) 



15. Polyclonus, W. F. Kirby. 



— Antennae without pectinations, nearly simple (or, at most, sub- 



serrate) in both sexes (PI. XII, Fig. 11) 16. 



16. Antennae inserted low down on the face, just above the short 



transverse clypeus, and so not far from the labrum. Man- 

 dibles long and falcate, not toothed before the apex. 



16. Diphamorphos, Rohwer. 

 [For Synopsis of the species see p. 294.] 



— Insertions of antennae situated normally, i. e. considerably 



above the base of the clypeus, and nearly in the middle of the 

 face 17. 



17. In the fore-wing the apex of the obliquely truncated radial 



cell is separated from the margin of the wing by a distinct 

 (subtriangular) appendicular cell. 



17. Eurys, Newman = Euryopsis, W. F. Kirby. 



The general coloration of all the known forms is metallic 

 (aeneous, cupreous, or chalybeous). The antennae are 

 said to be always 9-jointed, and I have found them to 

 be almost invariably so in $ specimens. But out of four 



* I do not understand the formation of this word. Did the 

 author, perhaps, mean to write " Lophyrinae " '! 



