5(i Mr, C G. L.unb on Exotic Ohloi'opithe. 



cJ . — Ilead (top view, fij;^. 1")) : — Frons bare, dull except 

 for tlie very narrow redder mid-line extending from ocellus 

 to fondiead and the narrow ill-bounded main triangle; no 

 eve-mar,;ins ; hind head hairy at n[)per corners behind eyes. 

 Side-view (Hg. 14) : — Antennic aiul palpi clear yellow ; 

 arista hair-like, pale ; tongue lleshy and hooked at tip. In 

 front the face is wide, with no keel except a tiny bar be- 

 tween unteniue; margin of mouth arched. 



'riiorax b;ire on dorsum, which is flattened and dull except 

 for a central shining line exteiniin-g to the shining base ; the 

 sides above the nott)pleural sutni'e and all the jdeura are 

 abundantly clothed with long pale hairs. Scutellum enor- 

 mously swollen both sideways and upwards, smooth exi'cpt 

 for an extraordinary flattened area on the disc, which 

 is slightly dimpled ; the base towards thorax has two large 

 blackened areas with a pale line between; it is hairy, with 

 pale liairs, which are longest and regular ou the margin ; 

 notopleura smooth. 



AVings as fig. 14, the costal elevation from base to 1st 

 vein with a row of long, dark, silky hairs; the whole surface 

 much suffused except a rather narrow lower margin from 

 axillary angle to near the end of the 5th, and again from 

 beyond that end to just across the 4th. 



llalteres practically white. 



Legs long, hairy, all pale oratige except for a slight suffa- 

 sion on the front tibia and the darkened tarsi ; all the tarsi 

 somewhat swollen. The middle femur and tibia with abun- 

 dant long pale hairs. 



Abdomen flattened, long-nval, the maximum breadth 

 being about twice the thoracic breadth. 



The ? differs as follows: — Thorax not so dull and not 

 flattened ; wings with no costal elevation, the whole costa 

 being very gently curved in a continuous manner; no long 

 hairs on costa; no long hairs on middle legs. 



Size about 5 mm. 



Ijur. Ccdl., Melville Island, N. Australia (G. F. Hill). 



Bathyi'aria, gen. nov. 



Becker describes a genus Euryparia (III., p. 84) which 

 occurs in Formosa ; it has very deep jowls, quadrate 3rd 

 antennal joint, and is covered with white hairs. Among 

 the Durban species there are several specimens of a very 

 handsome small Chloropid that have the above characters, 



