No. 22.[ HYMENOPTERA OF CONNECTICUT. I9I 



Apical margin of second dorsal abdominal plate arched or 

 curved 65 



63. Hind femora blackish 64 



Hind femora stramineous; wings not whitish; propodeum ru- 

 gose, areola not circumscribed by carinae; third dorsal ab- 

 dominal segment partly yellowish; ovipositor prominently 

 exserted conanchetorum 



64. Wings distinctly whitish; first dorsal abdominal plate hardly 



one and one-half tiriies as long as wide at base and with 



a median fovea tischeriae 



Wings not distinctly whitish trachynotus 



65. First dorsal abdominal plate with a median fovea 66 



First dorsal abdominal plate without a median fovea 68 



66. First dorsal abdominal plate at least twice as long as wide at 



apex 67 



First dorsal abdominal plate one and one-half times as long 

 as wide at apex; tegulae blackish; all coxse blackish; hypo- 

 pygium brownish lacteicolor 



67. Tegulae reddish or stramineous; all coxae black or black- 



ish; venter black or blackish throughout forbesi 



Tegulfe blackish; all coxae stramineous; venter mostly yel- 

 lowish ; third dorsal abdominal segment yellowish laterally 



ninigretorum 



68. First dorsal abdominal plate striate 69 



First dorsal abdominal plate punctate; hind coxae and tegulae 



mostly stramineous recurvariae 



69. Hind coxae black, other coxae brownish; tegulae stramineous 



carpatus 

 Hind coxce stramineous and concolorous with other coxae; 

 tegulae black nipmuckoruni 



"A. (Stenopleura) podunkorum Viereck. 

 Host: Pyraiista futilalis. Type locality: Berlin, cocoone 

 collected 2g October, 1910; parasites emerged 4 February, 1911 

 (D. J. Caffrey). 



°A. (Protapanteles) pholisorse Riley. 



Length 2.4-2.7 mm. Host: PhoUsora catullus. Cocoons white 

 and solitary. 



""A. (P.) orgyiae Ashmead. 

 Length 2.2 mm. Host: v^hite-marked tussock moth (Hemer- 

 ocompa leucostigma). Said to have been reared from a hibernat- 

 ing chrysalis. 



"'A. (P.) nemorias Ashmead. 

 Length 1.8-2 mm. Reared August, 1883, from larvae of Ne- 

 moria, probably N. gratata, which fed on Euphorbia corollata; 26 



