338 Messrs. Meade-Waldo, Morley, and Turner on 



Endurus, Bond. Bull. Soc. Ent. Ital. 1896, p. 66 = Arthula, Cam. 



Manch. Mem. 1900, p. 110. 

 " Campoplex " calamice, Cam. Proc. Linu. Soc. N. S. "Wales, xxvii. 



1912, p. 189, belongs to the genus Accenitus (sensu lato). 



Subfamily Teyphonin^:. 



Dyspetes praerogator, lAnn. — Delomerista erytlirostoma, Cam., c£, 



from Japan. 



Erromenus melanonotus (Grav.). — Tryphon melanonotus, Grav. ii. 



1829, p. 269, 5 =? Trichocalymma plebejum, Wold. Bull. Ac. 



Petrograd, 1877, p. 456, S • 

 "Tryphon" intermedins, Grav. lib. cit. p. 216, 5 = forte Mono- 



blastus exstirpatorius, Grav. I. c. p. 213 : var. areola alarum 



obsoleta. 



Diplomorplms tlioracicus, Giraud, Ann. Soc. France, 1871, p. 409, is 

 most closely allied in the Palsearctic fauna to Labrossyta ; 

 the basal segment is subsessile, the wings infumate and 

 claws not pectinate ; Dalla Torre left it among his genera 

 sedis iucertse. I know nothing of Kriechbaumer's two 

 species. 



Perilissus longicornis (Cam.). — Silavoga lonyicornis, Cam., from the 

 Transvaal, is a typical species of this genus, extremely 

 closely allied to P. jpallidus. 



JVeleothymus, Forst. Verh. pr. Rheinl. 1868, p. 200. — According to 

 Ruthe's collection, this appears to be a subgenus of Eury- 

 proctus. Cf. post. 



Megatrema albopilosa, Cam. Zeits. Hym. Dipt. 1907, p. 469, $ = 

 Seticornuta albicalcar, Mori. Faun. Brit. Ind., Ichn. 1913, 

 p. 310, $ . 



JPolyclistus femoralis, Fourc. et Grav.= ExocJius fuscip)ilosus, Cam., 



d =Plesioexochus rujipes, Cam., $ . 



Cerda fuscipennis, Cam. Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc. xx. 1904, p. 255, 

 belongs to the Exochides, and is in no way related to Prot- 

 archus, as stated by Cameron. 



Subfamily Ophionin^:. 



JSeleothymus rujldomatus, Cameron (who queries the genus), Invert. 

 Pacif. i. 1905, p. 103, is a true species of the genus Cre- 

 mastus, Grav. 



Cremastus andax, Cresson= Porizon audax, Cress. Trans. Amer. 

 Ent. Soc. iv. 1872, p. 174, J . " Four specimens" — in the 

 British Museum are four specimens — " from Texas, Belfrage," 

 of which two are $ $ , differing only sexually in having the 

 terebra about as long as the basal segment. The hind 



