Parasitic insects from North Queensland. 125 
APPENDIX. 
1. New species of Braconide and Chalcidide from N. Queens- 
land, bred by F. P. Dopp. By Colonel CHARLES T. 
BINGHAM, F.ZS. 
BRACONID. 
No. 1. APANTELES DELIADIS, form. nov. 
2. Head broader than long, face below the antennz slightly 
raised, front and vertex smooth, occiput not margined. Thorax 
short, broad anteriorly, pro- and mesonotum and scutellum minutely 
but very closely punctured ; wings hyaline and iridescent, legs long, 
posterior tibize slightly incrassate. Abdomen short irregularly 
obliquely truncate at apex, compressed, ovipositor slightly exserted. 
Black ; antenne reddish-brown ; the trochanters, femora, tibize and 
tarsi of the legs, and the basal three segments of the abdomen on the 
sides, dark brownish-yellow. 
3. Similar in sculpture and colouring to the 2 but the abdomen 
is vertically not obliquely truncate. 
Length 9 34 mm., of ovipositor} mm.: ¢ 3 mm. 
Exp. ¢ 2? 5mm. 
¢ and @ types in Hope Department, Oxford University 
Museum: { and 2 co-types in British Museum of 
Natural History. 
Hab, N. QUEENSLAND, Townsville (fF. P. Dodd). 
A true Apanteles, with the antenne 18-jointed, eyes 
minutely pilose, and the radial and cubital abscissi faintly 
marked. No form of the genus has, so far as I know, been 
previously recorded from Australia. 
The hyperparasites (No. 2) of the above species belong 
to a new species of Chalcidide described on page 127 as 
Microterys cerulescens. 
Nos. 3 and 5. MIcROGASTER BASALIS, form. nov. 
3- Head smooth and shining, vertex broad, ocelli prominent. 
Antenne elongate 18-jointed densely pilose. Thorax broad, gibbous 
anteriorly, smooth ; mesonotum with two longitudinal short deep 
impressed lines, mesopleure not furrowed smooth; scutellum 
