8IMA. 113 



and Lower Burma I only procured typical forms. A specimen 

 from Thagata in Tenasserim, procured by Fea, has been separated 

 by Dr. Forel as var. thagatensis. It differs in having the legs as 

 well as the whole of the antennae brown, and being longer (8'5 mm.) 

 and more robust than the type. 



132. Sima petiolata, Smith (Tetraponera), Trans. Ent. Soc. 1877, 

 p. 70. 



. Jet-black, smooth and shining, with only a few scattered 

 punctures ; the anterior pair of legs, and the tibiae and tarsi of 

 the intermediate and posterior pair very dark brown ; mandibles 

 and scape of the antennae light, somewhat reddish brown, flagellum 

 fuscous ; pilosity pale, very sparse except on the scape of the 

 antennae and tibiae and tarsi of the legs ; pubescence almost 

 entirely wanting (possibly abraded in the type in the British 

 Museum and in the one other specimen I have). Head nearly 

 square, almost as broad as long, the occiput broad, transverse, 

 slightly rounded, the cheeks very convex ; the eyes placed to the 

 front and above the middle of the head ; mandibles broad from 

 base, as in all the species of the genus, somewhat coarsely longi- 

 tudinally striate and punctured ; clypeus narrow, the basal portion 

 very slightly projecting, subvertical ; anteunal carinae short, very 

 close together ; antennae short and stout, the scape barely extend- 

 ing to the top of the eyes ; an impressed short longitudinal line 

 on the front below the vertex. Thorax narrower than the head ; 

 the pronotum very flat, submargined posteriorly and laterally, 

 arched in front ; meso-metanotal suture arched, anteriorly distinct, 

 mesonotum longitudinally oval, raised ; the thorax in profile emar- 

 giuate at the meso-metanotal suture; metanotum shaped as in 

 S. niyra, but shorter and not so compressed ; legs comparatively 

 long and slender. Pedicel proportionately very long, both nodes 

 with long petioles anteriorly ; 1st node large, as broad as the 2nd 

 node and much longer, this latter cup-shaped, not constricted pos- 

 teriorly ; abdomen very narrowly oval. 

 Length, $ 6-6'5 mm. 



Hob, Ceylon (Smith) ; Upper Burma, Euby Mines district 

 (Binyham). The specimen from Burma differs a little in being 

 smaller and more slender, and in the pronotum of the thorax being 

 longer, not so flat. 



133. Sima allaborans, Walker (Pseudomynna), A. M. N. H. (3) iv 



(1859), p. 375, c? 



Sima compvessa, Roycr, Berl. ent. Zeit. vii (1863), p. 179. 

 Sima subtilis, Emery, Ann. Mus. Cio. Gen. xxvii (1889), p. 500, , 

 pi. 11, figs. 24 & 25. 



. Black, highly polished and shining ; mandibles and antennas 

 reddish yellow, legs reddish bro\vn, the femora fuscous; pilosity 

 very sparse, consisting onlv of a few scattered pale hairs, pubescence 

 entirely wanting, head, thorax and abdomen with only a few 



