81 



Hab. — North Queensland : Kuranda. Described from one 

 male caught by sweeping on edge of jungle, September 16, 

 1913 (A. P. Dodd). 



Type. — I. 2000, South Australian Museum. A male on 

 a tag, the head and forewings on a slide. 



Trimorus nigrellus, sp. nov. 



9 . Does not differ from Hoplogryon punctata, Dodd, 

 except in having delicate but distinct parapsidal furrows ; only 

 the extreme base of the third abdominal segment is striate; 

 the third funicle joint is nearly twice as long as wide ; the 

 forewings are narrower, less infuscated ; the venation is not 

 so black. Length, 2 mm. 



d . Antennae one-third longer than the body ; wholly 

 black; as in niger, Dodd. 



Hab. — North Queensland: Nelson.' Described from one 

 female caught by sweeping jungle near a swamp, November 

 2, 1912 (A. A. Girault) ; and one male caught by sweeping 

 on edge of stream in forest, April 15, 1913 (A. P. Dodd). 



Type. — I. 2001, South Australian Museum. A male, 

 tagmounted, plus a slide bearing female antennae and fore- 

 wings. 



Trimorus mymaripennis, sp. nov. 



<3 . Black ; base of abdomen bright-yellow ; legs fuscous, 

 the tarsi pale-yellow; antennae wholly black. Head no wider 

 than the thorax. Thorax one-half longer than wide; meso- 

 notum finely polygonally sculptured ; parapsidal furrows deli- 

 cate, but complete ; scutellum smooth ; postscutellum with a 

 short spine ; posterior angles of metanotum with a small spine. 

 Abdomen a little longer and wider than the thorax ; first seg- 

 ment very transverse; first and second segments striate, the 

 third smooth. Antennae long and slender, somewhat longer 

 than the body; pedicel short and stout, wider than long; first 

 funicle- joint twice as long as wide ; second a little longer than 

 first; third a little longer than second ; 3-10 subequal. Fore- 

 wings reaching well beyond apex of abdomen; very slender 

 and graceful, blade-shaped, the apex pointed, five or six times 

 as long as their greatest width ; a little infuscated ; longest 

 marginal cilia equal to greatest wing width ; discal cilia 

 moderately fine, arranged in about ten lines ; marginal vein 

 terminating a little beyond middle of wing ; stigmal vein 

 short, very oblique, without a distinct knob. 



A species unique on account of its graceful mymarid-like 

 wings. 



Hab. — North Queensland: Nelson. Described from one 

 male caught by sweeping in forest, summit of second coast 

 range, 1,500 ft., May 29, 1913 (A. A. Girault). 



