142 MK. CLAUDE MORLBY ON AFRICAN 



Abdomen immaculate fulvous, fusiform ; postpetiole centrally 

 very finely aciculate, laterally punctate; gastrocoeli large, deep 

 and transveise, Avith the narrow intervening space evenly punc- 

 tate ; terebra black and exserted. Legs normal ; bind coxw 

 mutic. AVings hyaline ; radix and teguhe stramineous, stigma 

 castaneous ; areolet small and pentagonal, nervelet nodiform ; 

 basal nervure continuous through the median. Length, 7 mm, 

 2 only. — Ca.ptui-ed at Northern Buddu at 3800 feet during the 

 middle of September 1911 in Uganda. 



6. GEMINIFER, Sp. n. 



A rufescent-testaceons female, very like the last but larger with 

 the mesonotum nitidulous and only sparsely punctate, its disc red 

 and sides occasionally black ; the scutellum is rufescent with its 

 lateral carinfe and instriate apex strmnineous ; the metanotal 

 ai-eola, though similarly shaped, is much larger; the abdomen 

 testaceous with postpetiole evenly and distinctly punctate 

 throughout ; gastrocreli small and much narrower than their 

 intervening space ; terebra basally rufescent ; coxse testaceous, 

 with no stramineous markings. Length, 12-14 mm. $ only. — 

 A couple of females (one with the metathorax testaceous and 

 only geminate spots as in the last species ; the other with the 

 external and dentiparal arefe black and a stramineous pleural 

 streak) at Mlanje in September and October 1913 at 2300 feet 

 in Nyasaland. Also found by W. E. Jones, during March 1917, 

 at Mfongosi in Zululand. 



7. TESTACEUS Cam. 



Holcichneumon testaceus Cameron, Ann. Mus. Transvaal, ii. 

 1911, p. 175, ?. 



I have examined this unique, bred in the Transvaal, and find 

 it belongs here. 



8. GLOBULIFER, Sp. n. 



Males difiering from the next species (C. stdcifer) solely in 

 their general flavous coloration, lack of metapleural marks ; 

 in the subglabrous postpetiole, simple second segment with 

 normal gastrocoeli ; in the black ocellar region, hind tarsi and 

 hind tibipe, with pale calcaria ; in the subcircular metanotal 

 areola, the apically coalescent alar areolet ; and in the sub- 

 conically elevated scutellum with long black pilosity. Length, 

 13 mm. (5 only. — A couple of males were found at Kibwezi at 

 3000 feet, at the beginning of April 1911, in British East Africa; 

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

 of September 1911, in Uganda. 



9. SULCIFER, sp. n. 



A vexy dull, rufescent-iestaceotis species with only the face 

 suhjiavldffus ; flagellum except the centi^al white band, sides of 



