82 HYMENOPTERA. 



inner edge serrated, armed beneath, near their base, with a stout 

 tooth ; the antennae placed forward on the head. Thorax twice 

 the length of the head ; the prothorax swollen at the sides, the 

 sides of meso- and metathorax parallel. The peduncle incrassate ; 

 the apical margin of the first segment of the abdomen constricted. 



1. DREPANOGNATHUS SALTATOR. PI. V. figs. 18, 19. 



Harpegnathos saltator, Jerdon, Madr. Journ. Lit. fy Sci. (1851) 

 116; Ann. Sf Mag. Nat. Hist. 2nd ser. xiii. 100. 



" Worker : head long and granulated ; jaws with a strong tooth 

 near the base pointing downwards arid inwards, and thence gra- 

 dually tapering to the tip, and finely serrated, -J- of an inch long ; 

 thorax barely grooved ; abdominal pedicle small, low, ovate ; 

 abdomen very long; sting large; head and abdomen blackish- 

 brown ; thorax and legs rufous. Length f of an inch. 



" I have given it the name of saltator from its power of making 

 most surprising jumps, which it does when alarmed or disturbed. 

 It is very pugnacious, and bites and stings severely. It makes 

 its nest underground, generally about the roots of some plant. 

 Its society does not consist of many individuals. It appears to 

 feed on insects, which it seizes alive." (Jerdon.) 



2. DREPANOGNATHUS CRUENTATUS. B.M. 



Worker. Length 6J lines. Head, thorax and peduncle of 

 the abdomen red ; the antenna:, mandibles and legs pale rufo- 

 testaceotis. The head, thorax and abdominal peduncle coarsely 

 granulated ; the ocelli in triangle, approximate, placed about the 

 middle of the head. The abdomen smooth and shining, about 

 two-thirds of the length of the thorax ; the first segment strongly 

 punctured at the base, the following with a few scattered deli- 

 cate punctures, the apical margins narrowly testaceous. 



Hab. Hong Kong. 



Mr. J. C. Bowring informs me that this species has the power 

 of making surprising leaps, a fact also mentioned by Jerdon in 

 his description of the Indian species. 



3. DREPANOGNATHUS VENATOR. B.M. 



Worker. Length 6^ lines. Exactly similar in form to cru- 

 entatus, but with the head, thorax and abdomen black; the 

 legs and mandibles pale rufo-testaceous, the femora and tibia? 

 with dusky lines outside. Abdomen finely granulated and opake. 



Hab. Madras. 

 This species very closely resembles cruentatus, but the joints 



