2;U Mr. R. E. Tuiner on 



third joint nearly half as long again as the fourth. Eyes 

 separated from the base of the mandibles by a distance equal 

 to about one-quarter of the length of the third antennal joint. 

 Head, thorax, and median segment opaque, the face very 

 minutely atul closely, the clypeus rather more strongly, punc- 

 tured. Posterior ocelli a little further from each other than 

 from the eyes ; the head transverse, broader than the thorax. 

 Parapsidal furrows distinct, but shallow ; median segment 

 not strongly convex, with an almost obsolete median sulcus, 

 minutely punctured, broader than long. Abdomen shining, 

 microscopically punctured, not petiolate; the first segment 

 twice as broad at the apex as at the base, more than twice as 

 long as its apical breadth, longer than the second segment. 

 Tarsal ungues strongly pectinate. Areolet triangular, with a 

 short petiole, receiving the second recurrent nervure at the 

 apex; nervulns interstitial. 



Hab. Mt. Mou, March 15 ; 1 ? . 



Subfamily Opsioninm. 



Ilenicospilus montajuei, sp. n. 



5* . Testacea ; antennis nigris, basi testaceis ; alls h)'alinis, irides- 

 ccntihus, stigmate venisqne nigris ; cellula cubitali macula 

 curvata brunnea. 



Long. 16 mta. 



? . Very slender. Face very minutely and closely punc- 

 tured ; ocelli large. Antennje measuring 17 mm. in lengtii, 

 the scape and four basal joints of the flagellum testaceous. 

 Mesonotum subopaque, not punctured. Median segment 

 smooth and shining at the base, the apical slope behind the 

 transverse carina coarsely rugose. First abdominal segment 

 long and slender, slightl}' swollen towards the apex ; second 

 about as long as the third and fourth combined, very slender, 

 not compressed laterally, the apical half slightly swollen ; the 

 remaining segments strongly compressed laterally. Corneous 

 spot in the cubital cell large at the base, narrow and curved 

 strongly. 



Hab. Mt. Mou, February 15 ; 1 ? . 



This somewhat resembles the Queensland species H. turner >\ 

 Mori., especially in the black stigma, but is without the 

 second spot in the cubital cell, and the apical abdominal 

 segments are not black as in that species. 



