ART. 14 THE CHALCID-FLY GENUS CALLIMOME HUBER 75 



nearly as wide as first joint of funicle and longer; funicle joints equal 

 in length but gradually increasing in width toward the tip, each joint 

 with a single row of regularly arranged and widely placed yellowish 

 hairs; eyes brownish and widely divergent below; ocelli amber; me- 

 dian ocellus considerably larger than the posterior ocelli; vertex more 

 coarsely rugose and a distinct greenish-brown. Thorax rather robust, 

 the dorsum minutely aciculately rugose; parapsidal grooves repre- 

 sented by rather shallow black hues so that the reticulations appear 

 to continue from one sclerite to the other; scutellum somewhat ele- 

 vated at the anterior margin and rounded dorsally; scutellar cross 

 furrow beyond the posterior one-third; scutellar apex as coarsely but 

 not so deeply sculptured appearing polished at certain angles; meso- 

 scutum and scapulae densely clothed with silver}^ hairs, the hairs less 

 dense on the scutellum; coxae, trochanters, and femora greenish- 

 brown, the femora slightly pubescent; tibiae yellowish, tips of tarsi 

 brown; wings moderately ciiiate, veins very pale yellow, the marginal 

 vein about three-fourths as long as the submarginal, and the stigmal 

 vein sessile. Abdomen longer than thorax; dark metallic green; 

 almost flat dorsally; the first four segments medially incised; brown 

 ventrally ; ovipositor about one and one-half times as long as abdomen. 



Male. — Unknown. 



Ti/pe locality. — Fort Grant, Ariz. 



Host. — Cecidomyid galls on stems of Artemisia, species. 



Type.—C^t. No. 25330, U.S.N. M. 



Described from nine females reared from galls collected by H. K. 

 Morrison and recorded under Bureau of Entomology No. 2732°. 

 The type female and six paratypes are in the collection of the United 

 States National Museum. Two paratypes are in the author's 

 collection. 



67, CALLIMOME HAINESI (Ashmead) 



Figure 12 



Torymus hainesi Ashmead, Ent. News, vol. 4, 1893, p. 278. 

 Callimome asphondyliae Gahan, Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer., vol. 12, 1919, pp. l')l-2, 

 not {Torymiis) CalUinoine asphondyliae Kieffer and Jorgensen. 



The following description, except for the single v.H>rd in parenthesis, 

 is Gahan's original: 



Female. — Length 2.25 mm. Head and thorax shagreened above; face below 

 antennae less strongly sculptured than the vertex; antennae rather short and thick; 

 funicle joints subequal in length, but increasing slightly in breadth the ape.x 

 and all joints broader than long, the first only slightly so, the last about half as 

 long as thick; club not as long as the three preceding joints of funicle; ocelli in a 

 low triangle, the lateral ocellus separated from the eye margin by about the long 

 diameter of the ocellus; parapsidal grooves complete, but weaklj' impressed pos- 

 teriorly; propodeum without carinae and uniformly shagreened, the sculpture 

 not as strong as on the scutellum; hind femora outwardly sculptured about like 

 the propodeum; wings sparsely ciliated the cilia more or less arranged in rows; 

 stigmal vein very short {sessile), postmarginal also short; abdomen about equal 



