No. 22.] HYMENOPTERA OF CONNECTICUT. 475 



°P. sp. 



Parasitic on Ameloctonus, Aleiodes intermedius, and Habro- 

 bracon gelechu^, 



°P. (Dibrachys) boucheanus Ratzeburg, U. S. Dept. Agric.^ 

 Div. Entomology, Bull. 5, Technical Series, 1897, p. 35, Fig. 18. 



Female : length i V(^*-iV^ mm. ; head and thorax mostly 

 greenish, and as closely reticulately punctate as possible; scape 

 dark testaceous, rest of antennae dark brown; legs, except coxae, 

 which are concolorous with thorax, mostly pale testaceous ; abdo- 

 men practically entirely blackish, with a greenish tinge, especially 

 at base above. Male flagel not twice as long as the scape ; colors 

 more constant than in female. In some female individuals part 

 of the scape is dark. The hind legs may be more or less infus- 

 cated in this species. 



This is at times a very abundant hyperparasite of the gipsy 

 moth (Porthetria dispar), the white-marked tussock moth 

 (Hemerocampa leucostigma), the American tent caterpillar 

 {Malacosoma americana), and Hyphantria. It has been bred 

 from species of ^/'aw^^d^j, {Limnerium) Campoplex (?) validiis, 

 Campoplex {Ameloctonus) fugitivus, Hemiteles, {Bothy thrix) 

 pimplce, {[Pimpla) ^Scambus {Iseropus) inquisitoriellius, {P.) 

 Scamhiis {Itoplectis) conquisitor, Meteorus communis, M. hy~ 

 phantrice, Paranomalon, Microbracon, Aleiodes intermedins, 

 Theronia fulvescens, and possibly Spilochalcis debilis. 

 °P. (D.) sp. 



Bred from Apanteles clisiocampce and Habrobracon gelechicB. 



P. (Psychophagus) omnivorus Walker. Diglochis Foerster. 



Female: length 1-1.7 mm.; greenish aeneous, partly shining; 

 fuscous ; legs fulvous, except coxae, which are greenish, femora, 

 which are mostly fuscous yellow apically, tarsi, which are pale 

 fulvous, and the pulvilli and claws, which are fuscous ; abdomen 

 mostly aeneo-cupreous, first dorsal segment rich greenish, fulves- 

 cent, with its apex cupreous, pale. Male: greenish, shining; 

 mouth fulvous, antennae mostly fulvo-fuscous, first joint fulvous, 

 except its apex, which is dusky ; legs, except coxae, mostly yellow, 

 apex of tarsi fulvous, claws and pulvilli fuscous; tegulae and 

 veins mostly yellow; wings hyaline; abdomen maculated with 

 yellow ; otherwise practically as in the male. Color variable. 



