324 The Philippine Journal of Science 1913 



has reared this from Citrus fruit, at Los Bafios, P. I., together 

 with Lonchaea citricola sp. nov. 



Male and female. — Length of body, 9-10 mm.; of wing, 8-9 

 mm. ; of the antennae, 3 mm. ; of the ovipositor, 1.5-3 mm. Head 

 as described by Meijere for his conopsoides ; frons without 

 lateral spots, but with a large rounded middle spot ; the peculiar 

 black middle band of the face with the yellow portion over it 

 prominent in the form of a broad tubercle; the palpi are some- 

 times infuscated, brownish; third antennal joint black; arista 

 dark reddish; there is only the basal pair of frontoorbital bris- 

 tles. Mesonotum blackish brown, with 2 approximate broad 

 longitudinal gray bands; the median triangular yellow spot be- 

 hind the suture is well developed; pleural yellow stripe ending 

 on the middle of the sternopleura ; metanotum black, yellow 

 laterally, this yellow uniting with the yellow hypopleural spot. 

 Scutellum yellow, narrowly black at the base, with a pair of 

 weak apical bristles. Pteropleural bristle distinct, but not very 

 strong. First abdominal segment black; second black with a 

 narrow yellow hind border, and a broad yellow median band 

 interrupted centrally by a black line; other segments reddish 

 yellow, with golden pubescence, and a broad black band on ante- 

 rior half; third segment of the male not ciliated; ovipositor 

 short, flattened, reddish with brownish base. Legs yellowish 

 red, all the femora below with a broad black longitudinal band ; 

 hind tibiae brown ; first joint of all the tarsi whitish. Front fem- 

 ora with 3 or 4 black spines near the apex. The dark yellowish 

 costal area of wings extends caudad to fourth vein as far as the 

 origin of basal cross-vein, after which it extends little caudad of 

 the third; anal cell hyaline, its point very long and acute, the 

 stump of the sixth vein very short. 



66. Enicoptera proditrix 0. S., 1882. 



A very fine species, which on account of its complete chsetotaxy 

 cannot be placed among the Dacinse, which it resembles only in 

 the want of the sternopleural bristles. Enderlein has recently 

 recorded this species from Sumatra, 



67. Gastrozona capillata sp. nov. 



This and the following species can be placed in my genus 

 Gastrozona on account of the form of the antennae, want of 

 ocellar bristles, and color pattern of the wings; but they differ 

 from the typical species in having very numerous (6 or 7) lower 

 frontoorbital bristles. 



Female. — Length of body, 6 mm.; of ovipositor, 1.5 mm. 



