Aculeate Hymenoptera in Oxford Museum. 559 
RuHopeEsiA: Mashonaland, Salisbury 5000 ft. ¢ (G4. 
Marshall) ; East Loangwa, Petauké 2400 ft. (S. A. Neave). 
The males of two forms, probably new, are also con- 
tained in the collection; but as they are represented each 
by only one specimen, and these not in the best condition, 
I have failed to identify them and do not like to describe 
them as new. 
26. Enis (TRIELIS) PARDALINA, Gerstaeker. 
Scolia pardalina, Gerst., Monats. Acad. Berlin, Nov. 1857 ; 
id. Mém. Acad. Berl., 1858, p. 495, pl. 31, fig. 11 %. 
Elis (Trielis) pardalina, Sauss. and Sich., Cat. Spec. Gen. 
Scol., 1864, p. 148 2. 
Port EREL* 2 (Coll. W. W. Saunders). ZAMBEZI f 
(S. A. Neave). 
The 9, of which there is a single specimen only, very 
closely resembles Elis (Dielis) clotho, Sauss., but the wings 
are hyaline with a fuscous subapical cloud on the fore- 
wing, and that wing has also three cubital cells and two 
recurrent nervures. 
27. MYZINE RUFONIGRA, form n. 
RHODESIA: Bulawayo: Sept. 9, 1905 (F. A. Dizey). 
¢. Dull black, covered with long, soft, somewhat woolly, white 
hairs which are most dense on the front of the head and on the 
thorax posteriorly ; the mandibles, clypeus, a spot above the base 
of the antennae, transverse medially interrupted narrow bands on 
the anterior and posterior margins of the pronotum, the tegulae, 
the tibiae and tarsi above, the femora beneath, and transverse narrow 
bands on the 3rd-6th abdominal segments above pale somewhat 
greenish yellow ; the yellow on the tibiae and tarsi of the anterior 
and intermediate legs is continued on the underside and the trans- 
verse yellow bands on the abdominal segments are each anteriorly 
emarginate laterally; basal two abdominal segments blood red. 
Wings hyaline. Head, thorax and abdomen minutely and some- 
what sparsely punctured, the median segment posteriorly, and the 
* “Port Erel” was Col. Bingham’s reading of W. W. Saunders’ 
handwriting on the label. It seems to me more like * Port Wel,” 
a possible contraction of “Port Welcome”; but my friend Prof, 
A. J. Herbertson has not been able to find that either is known to 
geographical science.—E. B, P. 
