NO. 1869. NEW SPECIES OF WASPS— ROHWER. 463 



few scattered punctures; calcaria long, slender, pallid; carina of the 

 first ventral segment not toothed, slightly higher at the rounded 

 anterior end; punctures of the second dorsal segment close and 

 sometimes confluent; apical part of pygidium granular, basal part 

 longitudinally striate. Rufo-ferruginous; apex of mandibles, anten- 

 nas, legs, apical margin of the second and the entire following segments 

 black; second dorsal segment with two large ferruginous spots; 

 fourth and fifth dorsal and ventral segments beyond the second wdth 

 rather dense, slightly yellowish pubescence; base and apex of second 

 (connected by a narrow longitudinal medial line), and the third 

 dorsal segments with black pubescence; part of first and second 

 dorsal segments, head, and thorax with short appressed golden 

 pubescence and with sparse black hairs; legs mth white hairs. 



Lyme, Connecticut. One female collected July 31, 1910, by 

 Mr. A. B. Champlain. 



Type.— C&t. No. 14117, U.S.N.M. 



A metatype from Lake Forest, Illinois, July 24, 1899, differs only 

 in having the posterior femora rufous beneath, 



DASYMUTILLA ALLARDI, new species. 



Belongs to group cyprides, but may be separated from the other 

 species of the group by the bidentate carina of the first ventral 

 segment. 



Female. — Length, 10 mm. Differs from the above description of 

 scrohinata in the following points: Scrobes not defined above; tuber- 

 cules of the head elongate; sides of propodeum more closely punctured; 

 calcaria shorter, more robust and brownish; carina of first ventral 

 segment bidentate; pygidium nearly completely longitudinal striate; 

 second dorsal segment with but little black, basal pubescence and 

 with four pale spots; long hairs of head and thorax sparser and 

 yellowish. 



Thompsons Mills, Georgia. One female collected October, 1909, 

 by Mr. H. A. Allard, for whom the species is named. 



Type.— C&t. No. 14118, U.S.N.M. 



DASYMUTILLA FORMICALIA, new species. 



Belongs near calif ornica (Radoszkowski), but may readily be dis- 

 tinguished by the spot of black pubescence at the base and apex of 

 the second dorsal segments. 



Female. — Length, 11 mm. Head distinctly narrower than the 

 thorax anteriorly; clypeus truncate, rounded laterally; scrobes not 

 defined above; head coarsely irregularly, sometimes confluently 

 punctured; malar space greater than the diameter of the eye; scape 

 punctured; third antennal joint slightly concave beneath, not as long 

 as the two following joints; thorax hexagonal, but little longer than 



