Q6 



HYMEN OPT ERA 



CHAP. 



habits. The African and East Indian genus, Apterbgyna, includes 

 some extremely peculiar Hymenoptera ; the males have the wing 

 nervuration very much reduced, and the females are very ant-like 

 owing to the deep constriction behind the first abdominal ring. 



Sub-Fam. 2. Thynnides. Males and females very different in 

 form; the male winged, the front wing with three, or ouli/ 

 two, sub-marginal cells ; the female wingless and with the 

 thorax divided into three sub-equal parts. 



The Thynnides are by some entomologists not separated from 



bheMutillides; but 

 the distinction in 

 the structure of 

 the thorax of the 

 females is very 



e/ 



striking. In the 

 Thynnides the 

 nervuration of the 

 wing appears 

 always to extend 

 to the outer 

 margin, and in the 

 Muti Hides not to 



FIG. 39. Methoca ichneuinonides. A, Male ; B, female. (-JQ gQ This family 



Britain. 



is represented in 



Britain by a single very rare Insect, Methoca ichneumonides : to 

 the unskilled observer the female would appear to be without 

 doubt an ant. This Insect is by some considered as the type 

 of a family distinct from the Thynnides proper. Thynnides are 

 numerous in Australia. Very little is really known as to their 

 habits, though it has been stated that they are parasitic on 

 Lepidoptera, Bakewell having obtained specimens from sub- 

 terranean cocoons of that Order. Those who are interested in 

 differences between the sexes of one species should examine the 

 extraordinary examples of that phenomenon presented by the 

 Thynnides ; the dissimilarity throughout the group which is 

 now of considerable extent being so extreme that no ento- 

 mologist would from simple inspection believe the two sexes 

 to have any connection ; but the fact that they are so con- 

 nected has been demonstrated beyond doubt. In very few 



