244 Mr. R. E. Turner on the 
Iphiaulax grenadensis, Ashm. 
Iphiaulax grenadensis, Ashm. Trans. Ent. Soc. London, p. 294 (1900). 
dé. 
Iphiaulax harperi, Cam. Trans. Amer, Ent. Soc, xxxi. p, 383 (1905). 
Iphiaulac medianus, Cam. Journ. Roy. Agric. Soc. Demerara, i. p. 310 
(1911) (nec Szép. 1901). @. 
Iphiaulax villosus, Cam. Journ. Roy. Agric. Soc. Demerara, i. p. 310 
(1911). ¢. 
This has considerable economic importance as a parasite on 
the larva of the moth Diatrea saccharalis, the well- known 
sugar-cane pest. 
The type-specimens of all the above-quoted names are in 
the British Museum. 
Subfamily Hxorzzcrvz. 
Spinaria alicie, sp. n. 
2. Rufo-ferruginea; abdomine pallide flavo; flagello, macula 
inter ocellos, segmentis dorsalibus primo secundoque in medio 
latissime, tertio quartoque omnino spinis lateralibus exceptis, 
unguiculis anticis, tarsis intermediis articulo apicali, tibiis tarsis- 
que posticis nigris; coxis trochanteribusque posticis fusco- 
ferrugineis ; femoribus posticis basi nigris, apice fusco-testaceis ; 
alis fusco-hyalinis. 
Long. 9 mm. 
@. Front shining, almost smooth; eyes very large, very 
distinctly emarginate near the base of the antenne ; posterior 
ocelli almost touching the eyes, situated very close to the 
hind margin of the head. Pronotum with a straight erect 
spine which does not reach the level of the mesonotum ; 
parapsidal furrows well defined. Median segment rather 
indistinctly rugulose, with distinct lateral carinze and a stout 
blunt spine on each side at the apical angles, the median 
third of the segment forming an area separated from the rest 
by a curved longitudinal carina on each side. Dorsal surface 
of the abdomen coarsely longitudinally striated; each seg- 
ment with a low longitudinal carina in the middle, which is 
not produced into a spine on the third or fourth segments, 
both of which have a stout but rather short spine at the apical 
angles; fifth tergite very broad at the apex, produced into a 
Jong acute spine in the middle of the apical margin. Second 
abscissa of the radius not quite as long as the first transverse 
cubital nervure, but a little longer than the second. 
Hab. North Queensland, Kuranda (Turner), July 1913. 
