Indo-Chinese flymenoptera. 387 



Evania kuchingensis, Cam. 



Evania kuchingensis. Cam. Entomologist, xli. p. 237 (1908). <3 . 



Bab. Hoabinh, Tonkin ; October 5, 1917. 3 $ $ . 

 Originally described from Borneo. Also occurs in Hong- 

 Kong. 



Family Braconidse. 



Subfamily Helco^inm. 



Brullela evphemia, sp. n. 



5 . Rufo-testacea ; mandibulis apice, terebra valvulisque nigris ; 

 antennis 42-articulatis, nigris, artieulia duobus basalibus rufo- 

 testaceis, articulis 10-18 flavo-testaceis ; alia flavis, tertio 

 apicali leviter infuscatis, stigmate venisque i'uscis, venis basi 

 ruio-testaceis. 



Long. 20 mm. ; terebra? long. 31 mm. ; antennarum long. 14 mm. 



? . Mandibles stout, bidentate at the apex ; clypeus 

 finely punctured, short, transverse. Face much broader 

 than long, rug< se ; front finely rugulose, short, concave but 

 not deeply excavated; vertex finely punctured. Cheeks 

 nearly ha.f as long as the eyes ; In ad broader than the 

 thorax. Mesonotum finely punctured ; notauli deep and 

 creuulate ; the posterior half of the mesonotum broadly 

 depressed in the middle, the depressed portion wiih a median 

 longitudinal carina and with coarse transverse striae; scu- 

 telluni finely punctured. Median segment nearly twice as 

 broad as long, very coarsely rugose, becoming more or less 

 reticulate towards the apex, the sides of the segment very 

 coarsely reticulate. First tergite about three times as long- 

 as its apical breadth, slender, rugose ; second tergite as 

 long as broad, strongly but rather sparsely punctured, the 

 remaining segments very finely punctured. Hypopygium 

 not nearly reaching the apex of the abdomen ; valvulae thinly 

 clothed with very short hairs. Hind metatarsus longer 

 than the four apical tarsal joints combined, calcaria short, 

 but stout. Second abscissa of the radius a little longer than 

 the first, recurrent nervure received near the base of the 

 second cubital cell, nervulus slightly postfurcal, discoidal 

 cell sessile. 



Hab. Tonkin ; May, 1917. 



Somewhat allied to B. chinensis, Turn., from N. China, 

 but quite distinct. 



