446 BULLETIN 45, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



Basalys brevicornis, sp. nov. 



9. Lenj?th, 3""". Black, polished; antennae and legs piceons; the 

 scape beneath, the pedicel and three basal joints of the funicle show- 

 ing more or less yellow; teguliB, anterior femora beneath, the slender 

 portion of all the tibia? and the tarsi, honey-yellow. Mesouotum with 

 two very short grooved lines posteriorly. Scutellum with two oblicjue 

 fovejB at base; while the metanotum is rugose with a distinct median 

 carina. Abdomen oblong-oval, highly polished, and at base overlapping 

 the short, thick, fluted petiole. Antennai very short, 13-jointed, sub- 

 flliform, extending scarisely to the tegula? ; the flagellar joints after the 

 first wider than long, the terminal joint oblong. Wings subhyaline, a 

 distinct costal cell, a basal cell, and rather large, triangular stigma, the 

 latter with a distinct backward directed vein. 



Habitat. — Colorado. 



Type in Coll. Ashmead. 



Eemarkable for the brevity and shape of the autennie. 



Basalys califomica, sp. uov. 

 (PI. XVIII, Fig. 7, <? ; a, 9 aiit«iiiua.) 



9. Length, 1.6™™. Apterous; polished black, impunctured, sparsely 

 pubescent; funicle and legs, including coxfe, honey-yellow or reddish- 

 yellow ; scape and club brown-black. Head globose, the frons slightly 

 impressed, abrupt. AntennjB 13-jointed, terminating in an abrupt, 

 4-jointed club; funicle slender, filiform, the joints after the first monili- 

 form ; club abrui)tly enlarged, the first joint rounded basally, the two 

 middle joints quadrate, the last, oblong. Thorax subovate, the collar 

 woolly at the sides, the mesouotum flat on disk, with indications of two 

 very short grooved lines posteriorly just in front of the scutellum, the 

 latter with a small fovea at base, the metanotum with a delicate median 

 carina. Abdomen obloug-oval, polished, the petiole about twice as 

 long as thick, striated. 



Habitat. — Santa Cruz Mountains, California. 



Types in Coll. Ashmead. 



Unfortunately, in making my drawings of this sx>ecies and before I 

 had drawn up my description, I kno(*ke<l oft" the head of the male with 

 my i)Ocket lens; it fell to the floor and could not be found. It is now 

 in too poor a condition for description, but I hope it will be recognized 

 by the figure. 



j^ _ MYRMECOPRIA Asbiii., gen. imv. 



(Type M. mfllea, Aahm. 9.) 



Head globose, without a frontal sulcus; the occiput small, convex; 

 ocelli 3, small, close together in a triangle; eyes round, rather coarsely 

 facetted. 



