ICHNEUMONIN.E IX THE BKITISH MUSEUM. 135 



Kilimanjaro, some of which may belong to Hoiilojoppa, as was 

 indicated by Dr. Roman (Entoni. Tidskr. xxxi. p. 169) in 1910. 



1. FULVATOR, Sp. n. 



Pale testaceous with only part of ilagellum, apices of mandibles 

 and of hind onyches, black. Head obliquely constricted and 

 naiTow behind the very prominent eyes, whence the occiput falls 

 abruptly away ; frons obsoletely punctate, trans-substriate before 

 the ocelli and centrally sulcate ; face and clypeus nearly strami- 

 neous, flat and obsoletely punctate, with apex of latter truncate 

 and only latei'ally margined ; labruin exserted and cheeks long. 

 Flagellum slender and filiform, black with a central white band, 

 its base rufescent and apex attenuate ; of S subserrate, of § dis- 

 tinctly a little dilated, beyond centre. Thorax cylindrical ; 

 mesonotum dull and shagreened, with slight notauli ; nietanotum 

 shining and evenly punctate with complete, but fine, arete ; 

 areola subrectangular, half as long again as broad, extending 

 nearly to base, and emitting conspicuous costulae from its basal 

 third ; spiracular arete trans-striate ; apophyses large, vertical 

 and acuminate. Scutellum much higher than luetathorax, its 

 disc closely punctate and not strongly elevated, but both laterally 

 and apically stoutly vallate. Abdomen dull; basal segment very 

 slender with the shining and laterally punctate postpetiole very 

 little explanate ; gastrocceli wanting, thyridii obsolete and their 

 intervening space not striate ; venter plicate throughout ; anus 

 of $ acute, with the rufescent terebra distinctly a little exserted. 

 Legs long and slender ; calcaria elongate, coxte not scopulate. 

 AVings flavescent hyaline ; stigma and subcosta testaceous, ner- 

 vures darker ; areolet pentagonal, subcoalescent above ; nervelet 

 wanting ; basal nervure continuous through median. Length, 

 11-13 mm, S $. — Similar to H. falgens Tosq., but with the 

 metanotal ai-ea? distinct and scutellum carinate thi-oughout its 

 apex. — I have seen half a dozen examples of both sexes from the 

 Tero Forest, S.E. of Buddu, at 3800 feet, towards the end of 

 September ; from Fort Portal Road, Mbarara, Southern Toro, at 

 about 4000 feet, late in October ; from the Dnrru Forest, Toro, 

 at 4000-4500 feet, a few days later, in Uganda ; and fi'om Ilala 

 in the Maramns District, 14 miles east of Mumias at 4500 feet, 

 during the middle of June, in British East Africa. 



2. ciBDELUS Tosq. 



No one has referred to this species since the S was brought 

 forward (Mem. Soc. Entom. Belg. v. 1896, p. 52, n. 3) from 

 Dinko, Scioa, in Abyssinia, where Ragazzi captured it in 1887. 

 The 9 is a very dull, claret-red coloured insect, with the meta- 

 thorax entirely, mesopleurte except al)Ove, hind tarsi, prostei'num 

 partly, and apical half of flagellum, black; the frontal orbits 

 triangularly, flagellar band, pronotal margin, and anus white. 

 It is at once recognised by the distinctly and evenly punctate 



