from the Seychelles Islands and Rodrigues. 277 
not quite so long as the head, broadest near base, where it is 
about 2°25 times as broad as long. Surface smooth and 
shining, convex ; sides arched to base, margined ; base also 
margined. A pair of fovez indicated—one on each side of 
the centre line near the anterior margin, with a curved 
depression behind. Bristles long, the pair at posterior 
angles about 0°65 the length of the prothorax ; those at 
anterior angles directed forwards, straight. Pterothorax 
very slightly broader than the prothorax,. transverse. 
Wings broad, parallel-sided, reaching to the ninth abdominal 
segment, fore-wings with approximately thirty duplicated 
cilia ; cilia smoky-brown. Legs rather short and stout, fore- 
femora strongly incrassate ; tibiz stout and tarsus armed 
with a stout tooth. 
Abdomen broadly united to pterothorax, broadest at 
about the sixth segment, where it is about 1°2 times as 
broad as the prothorax ; segments strongly transverse. 
Tube a little longer than the head, stout; surface strongly 
sculptured, in some lights having a scale-like, in others 
a punctate, appearance ; extreme apex smooth. Terminal 
bristles as long as the tube; yellowish-brown, darkest 
basally. Bristles on 9 and 7 as long as the tube. Other 
abdominal bristles moderately long and stout. 
Loc. Srycuettes. Mahé: 1 3g, highdamp forest between 
Trois Freres and Morne Seychellois, about 1500-2000 ft., 
xii. 1908. 
Separated from A. simplex, Bagn., and A. antennatus, 
Bagn. (Bornean species), by its smaller size, shorter and 
stouter form, and the short head, which in simplex and 
antennatus is 1°7 and 1-5 times as long as broad, respectively. 
The intermediate antennal joints are relatively much shorter. 
Genus Evrynorurirs, Bagnall. 
15. Eurynothrips denticollis, Bagnall. 
This species, described in 1908 from Queensland examples, 
is represented in Mr. Scott’s collection by one male example. 
Its presence in the Seychelles fauna is surprising, as it has 
not been up to now recorded outside Queensland. 
Loc. Stycneturs. Mahé: 1 2g, near Morne Blanc, x.-xi. 
1908. 
