NO. 1387. HYMENOPTERA FROM THE PHILIPPINES— ASHMEAD. 139 



Sviljfaiiailj' II. ^VFKELIlSTIlSrjK. 



Tribe I. APHELININI. 



Genus ASPIDIOTIPH AGUS Howard. 



ASPIDIOTIPHAGUS ALEYRODIS, new species. 



Female. — Length 0. 6 mm. Head and thorax above, Ijrowni.sh-yellow ; 

 the face, cheeks, thorax beneath and at sides, and the scape of the 

 antenna^ A^ellowish-white or milky-white; the ej^es, the incision or 

 suture on each side of tlie scutellum, the metanotum, and the abdomen 

 are brown-black; the flagellum is pale brown, with some sparse dark- 

 colored hairs, while the wings are clear h^^aline, iridescent, with a long- 

 marginal fringe, the marginal vein being pale or yellowish, the stig- 

 mal vein not at all developed. 



Male. — Length 0.4 to 0.5 mm. Paler colored than the female, the 

 head, except the e^es, the thorax, scape of antennte, legs, and the base 

 of the abdomen being yellowish-white; rest of the abdomen and the 

 eyes brown-black; the flagellum is slender, tapering at tip, and brown- 

 ish; otherwise it is similar to the female, l)ut with a much smaller and 

 shorter abdomen. 



Type.— C?it. No. 7324, U.S.N.M. 



]Manila. Described from 3 female and 2 male specimens bred by 

 Father \V. A. Stanton from an Aleyrodes afi'ecting the sugar cane. 



" Family LXXIV. EVANIID.E. 



Subfamily I. KA^A^VII^ST.T:. 



Genus EVAN I A Fabrieius. 

 EVANIA ANNULIPES, new species. 



MaJe. — Length -i.o mm. Black; the head and thorax coarsely 

 rugosely punctate; face below the insertion of the antenna? and the 

 cheeks anteriorly longitudinally striate; the cheeks posteriori}- smooth 

 and highly polished, but with a row of punctures along the eye mar- 

 gin; a spot at base of mandibles, the trochanters (except the hind tro- 

 chanters), the tibial spurs, and a broad band at base of the hind tibifv 

 are white or yellowish- white; the base of the front and middle tibia^ 

 and their tarsi are yellowish, their femora, except at apex, are fuscous 

 or dark rufo-piceous; rest of the legs, except as noted, black. The 

 antenna?, except the first tive joints, which are honey-yellow, arc 

 black; the scape is long, as long as the pedicel, and joints 1 to 5 of the 

 flagellum united; the flagellum is thickened toward the apex from 

 the fourth joint, the first joint being the longest and slenderest — 

 about as long as joints 2 and 3 united; the third joint is the shortest, 

 being onl}' a little longer than thick. The abdomen is very small, 

 polished black, longly petiolated; the petiole yellow beneath at basal 



