134 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



deeply impressed and discally coalescent ; scutellum deplanate 

 and somewhat small ; metathoracic arese apparently obsolete, 

 though the apical transcarina is strong, spiracles circular and 

 very small, lateral carinas distinct ; petiole shagreened, centrally 

 subsulcate and gradually explanate throughout ; te,rebra a little 

 reflexed ; legs slender and not short, with pulvilli small and 

 claws somewhat elongate ; length, 7 mm. I would suggest a 

 position for it near the Cryptid genus Cecidonomus, Bridg. One 

 specimen. 



13. Mesoleptus stygius (p. 306, <?). — The subquadrate 

 vertex places this greasy male in Perilissus. The areolet is 

 entire, the legs unusually slender, and the abdomen has, I think, 

 once been centrally red ; length, 7| mm. One specimen. 



14. Campoplex albimanus (p. 306, $). — A typical Nemato- 

 poclius — just possibly A T . linearis, Grav. — with small, rectangular, 

 and slightly transverse areolet, emitting recurrent nervure a 

 little beyond its centre ; mesopleurae distinctly sulcate below, 

 and both flagellum and hind tarsi white-banded, and clypeus 

 wholly concolorous ; the thorax and abdomen bear a coating 

 which may once have been elongate pilosity ; both metanotal 

 transcarinae are entire ; spiracles strongly elongate ; length, 

 11 mm. One specimen. 



15. Sagaritis ventralis (p. 307, 2). — A Campoplegid, too 

 smothered in gum to determine. Antennae fractas ; areolet 

 entire and petiolate ; terebra shorter than breadth of anus 

 dorso-ventrally, and much less than basal segment ; areola 

 deeply impressed and confluent with petiolar area, as in Lim- 

 nerium, though the terebra is too short for that genus or Omorga ; 

 the third and following segments appear to be ochraceous, with 

 only a discal vitta black ; the coxas are normal ; length about 

 6 mm. Two specimens ; and a third, belonging to ? Eriborus, 

 with terebra longer than half abdomen and no areolet. 



16. Charops luteipes (p. 307, 2). — Type lost. Very im- 

 probably placed in its correct genus, for Walker's Porizon domi- 

 nans (Ann. Nat. Hist. 3, v. 1860, p. 307) is a typical Charops — 

 cf. ' Fauna of India,' i. 1913, p. 435. 



BrAOONIDjE. 



17. Bracon semiluteus (p. 307, 2 ). — Quite certainly synony- 

 mous with B. piger, Wesm. One specimen. 



18. Spathius fasciatus (p. 307, 2 ). — Superficially indis- 

 tinguishable from S. exarator, Linn. One specimen. 



19. Hecabolus cinctus (p. 308, <?). — Certainly belongs to 

 Marshall's Braconides-cyclostomes, not a Bracon, and perhaps 

 Hecabolus : I know nothing like it. One specimen. 



20. Chelonus diversus (p. 308, $). — A beautiful species of 



