56 PEOCEBDINGS OP THE NATIONAL MUSfiUM vol.70 



Callimome aenea was originally described from several specimens. 

 The present type series in the National collection consists of six 

 females, one of which has been selected as electotype. The males 

 have apparently been lost. The redescription is drawn from the type 

 series, except for the male, in which case I have used the old descrip- 

 tion with a few changes. 



Torymus omnivorae Ashmead and Callimome dryorhizoxeni Ashmead 

 have been treated above as synonyms. Of the former there were 

 specimens including type, allotype, and paratypes. Type Cat. No. 

 2885 U.S.N.M., all labeled Jacksonville, Fla. These were reared 

 from DisJiolcaspis omnivora (Ashmead). Ashmead writes that the 

 scutellum has no transverse groove; in this he was mistaken. Of 

 Callimome dryorhizoxeni Ashmead there is one type and one paratype 

 labeled Jacksonville, Fla., Type Cat. No. 1335, U.S.N.M., reared 

 from (DryorJiizoxenus) Eumayria jioridana (Ashmead). 



Distribution. — Jacksonville, Fla. (Types). In addition to the type 

 series the National collection contains the following : Two specimens, 

 Hopkins No. 15634gf, reared December 13, 1919, and November 23, 

 1920, from leaf galls on Quercus laurifolia (Michaux) collected by 

 L. H. Weld at Dayton, Fla. One specimen, Hopkins No. 15334/ 

 reared September 1, 1920, irom Andricus virens (Ashmead) on Quercus 

 geminata Small, collected by L.' H. Weld at Clearwater, Fla. Six 

 specimens labeled Jacksonville, Fla., and nine specimens with no data, 

 but which I have good reasons to believe to be from Florida, are in 

 the same lot. In the author's collection there is one female, Hopkins 

 No. 15634^, with data as above. 



49. CALLIMOME DASYNEURAE, new species 



Figure 10 



Female. — Length 2.75 mm.; ovipositor 1.5 mm. Body bluish. 

 Head blue-green, clothed sparsely with silvery white hairs, more 

 densely so below the antennae; face minutely sculptured but with 

 very shallow umbilicate impressions; antennae separated by a carina 

 which is elevated strongly and extends one-third the distance to 

 margin of mouth; antennae attached below the middle of front and 

 in a rather deep groove; scape greenish-yellow, long, slender, and 

 curved at the base; pedicel light brown, shining, robust, and longer 

 than the first joint of funicle; flagellum light brown; last joint of 

 funicle almost twice as wide as first joint, all more or less rectangular; 

 eyes pinkish bordered with a row of minute short appressed hairs; 

 ocelli very small and yellowish; the post ocelli a little more than twice 

 the short diameter of an ocellus from eye margin; ocelli almost twice as 

 wide as long. Thoracic dorsum reticulately punctate and cyaneous; 

 nearly as wide as the distance from the tip of scutellum to a point 



