Records of Bees. 349 



dark rufo-fuscons ; b. n. greatly arched ; first r. n. meeting 

 first t.-c. ; second s.ni. broad, but its upper apical corner 

 prodiiced. Legs light ferruginous, the femora marked with 

 piceous, the anterior femora almost wholly dark exce[)t at 

 extreme ends. Abdomen broad, pale reddish at extreme 

 apex and beneatli. 



Hab. Yallingup, S.W. Australia, Nov. 1913, 3 ? (/?. E. 

 Turner). British Museum. 



Perhaps better called Pachyprosopis narifera, but the 

 second s.m. is not of the extreme type characteristic of 

 Pachyprosopis. The species is allied to E. jjatipercula, but 

 much larger, with different markings. 



Euryylossa nigroc<Brulea, Cockerel 1. 



Mt. Wellington, Tasmania, 1300-2300 ft., Jan. 15.-Fcb. 6, 

 1913 (/?. E. Turner). 

 New to Tasmania. 



Euryglossa flavocuneata, sp. n. 



? . — Length about 8 mm. 



Similar to E. undaluta, Ckll., but differing thus : — Much 

 smaller ; apical part of abdomen light ferruginous, with hair 

 of the same colour : mandibles sometimes with a pale yellow 

 stripe above on basal half; flagellum beneath reddish brown, 

 without bands or spots ; scutellum wholly without a median 

 impressed line ; tegulae pellucid reddish testaceous. Wings 

 strongly inf uscated ; b. n. failing short of t.-m. Middle 

 tibiae with a broad yellowish stripe in front, sometimes obso- 

 lete; hind knees pallid. First abdominal segment with 

 more than basal half yellow, more or less marked with pale 

 reddish ; fifth segment pale red, flushed with yellow at base, 

 sixth red. The abdomen has six conspicuous cuneiform 

 yellow patches, representing the bands on segments 2 to 4. 

 The type has a very broad abdomen ; in the other two it 

 appears narrow, but evidently as the result of compression 

 in papers. The head and thorax are black, without pale 

 markings. 



Hab. Yallingup, S.W. Australia, Nov. 1913 [R. E. Turner). 

 British Museum. 



Had I received only the male of E. undidata, with females 

 of E. flavocuneata, I should have referred them without 

 hesitation to a single species. Fortunately the sexes of 

 undulata were taken mated ; the male of flavocuneata, when 

 found, will resemble that of undulata., presumably diflt'ering 

 by the darkened wiugs and testaceous tegulse. 



