114 



EURYTOMIN^. 

 EuRYTOMA, Illiger. 



EURYTOMA MAZZINII, neW Sp. 



$ . Robust. Black, the head and thorax with short, greyish 

 pubescence ; abdomen ventro-meso-proximad brownish ; coxse 

 and femora concolorous, tibiae and tarsi reddish-brown, also 

 the knees, most of the distal half of intermediate femora and 

 all of the scape. Antennae black, 11-jointed, the club 3- 

 jointed, one ring-joint ; joint one of funicle longest ; ring- 

 joint yellow. Wings hyaline, the postmarginal vein nearly as 

 long as the marginal, slightly longer than the stigmal. Length, 

 1-80 mm. 



(S . Not known. 



Hah. — Queensland: Mount Tambourine (A. M. Lea). 



Type. — I. 1350, South Australian Museum. One specimen 

 on a card and a slide with posterior femur and antenna. 



Dedicated to Giuseppe Mazzini for his ''The Duties of 

 Man." 



EURYSYSTOLE, UCW geu. 



9 . Agreeing with Systole, Walker, but the abdominal 

 segments not subequal, the fourth over thrice the length of the 

 third, longer than wide, very long, occupying more than a half 

 of the surface. The thorax is scaly, and with scattered, shal- 

 low punctures as in Systole opus. Posterior tibiae with only 

 one spur, Parapsidal furrows complete. 



c? . Not known. 



Type. — The species following. 



EURYSYSTOLE VULGARIS, UeW Sp. 



9 . Black, the wings hyaline, the venation very pallid- 

 yellow, the postmarginal vein somewhat shorter than the 

 stigmal; antennae pale-yellow, the pedicel dusky; legs honey- 

 yellow. Eleven antennal joints, one ring- joint, the first 

 funicle-joint subequal to the pedicel, only slightly longer than 

 wide, the others subequal to it or a little shorter; club 3- 

 jointed, larger, obliquely truncate. Pronotum with a more 

 or less obscure yellowish spot in the lateral aspect, cephalo- 

 ventrad. Third and following abdominal segments more or 

 less distinctly scaly. Cephalic ocellus not within the scrobicuiar 

 cavity. Knees, tips of tibiae, and tarsi white. Length, 1*45 

 mm. 



Hah. — Queensland: Cairns (A. M. Lea). 



Type. — I. 1351, South Australian Museum. One specimen 

 and a slide with posterior leg and antennae. 



