NEW CHALCIDOIDEA—GAHAN 49 
funicle six-jointed, the joints all wider than long, successively in- 
creasing slightly in width and length, the sixth joint ia quite twice as 
wide as first and about twice as prota as long; club not quite so long 
as funicle, scarcely broader than last rails joint, subeylindr fle 
obliquely oe at apex, and very indistinctly 3-jointed. Posterior 
femora entirely and their tibiae for the most part blackish. Other- 
wise like the female. 
Type locality.—F ranklin, La. 
Type.—vU.S.N.M. No. 55151. 
Remarks—Female holotype and three female paratypes received 
from J. W. Ingram and said to have been reared from Pseudococcus 
sp. on sugarcane taken at Franklin, La. Aliotype male reared from 
the same host at Thibodeaux, La., October 28, 1928, by E. K. Bynum, 
and one paratype female reared by the same entomologist from similar 
material collected at Gainesville, Fla. 
Genus EURYRHOPALUS Howard 
Huryrhopalus Howarp, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., vol. 21, p. cee 1898. 
Synaspidia TIMBERLAKE, Proc. Hawaiian Ent. Soc., vol. 5, p. 397, 1924. (New 
synonymy. ) 
The type of Luryrhopalus schwarzi Howard (genotype of Luryrho- 
palus) and paratypes of Synaspidia pretiosa Timberlake (g genotype 
of Synaspidia) have been compared and found to agree in all generic 
characters. The two species are extremely similar but may be dis- 
tinguished, for the present at least, by the fact that schwarz is slightly 
the larger, with the forewing distinctly infumated behind the mar- 
ginal vein, the hind wing distinctly more than half as broad as the 
forewing and forming a broad but distinctly acute angle at its apex, 
while the forewing of pretiosa is without distinct infuscation and the 
hind wing is not more than half the width of the forewing with its 
apex more rounded. Otherwise they seem to be practically in- 
distinguishable. 
Genus COENCYRTUS Ashmead 
OOENCYRTUS ANABRIVORUS, new species 
The female of this species is usually, though not always, brachyp- 
terous. The fully winged female appears to be a nearly typical 
Ooencyrtus except that the scutellum is less strongly sculptured, less 
convex, and less rounded at apex, while the forewing is weakly in- 
fuscated medially and the abdomen is a little longer and more robust 
than usual. The brachypterous females have the scutellum nearly flat, 
very faintly sculptured, and subacute posteriorly, while the wings 
vary in length and correspondingly in width, in some specimens 
barely extending to the apex of the propodeum, but in others attain- 
ing the middle of the abdomen. In the majority of individuals the 
