130 



Hab. — -North Queensland: Pentland. Described from 

 one female caught by sweeping in forest, December 7, 1912 

 (A. A. Girault). 



Type. — I. 2203, South Australian Museum. A female 

 tagmounted, plus a slide bearing head, antennae, and 

 forewings. 



Hadronotus fumosus, sp. nov. 



d, . Black; antennal scape and the legs (except the 

 coxae) reddish-yellow. Thorax finely densely punctured. 

 Abdomen with first segment striate, remaining segments finely 

 rugulose, second segment distinctly the longest. Forewings 

 reaching a little beyond apex of abdomen; moderately broad, 

 the apex not very square; hyaline, but an irregular, longi- 

 tudinal area round the stigmal and postmarginal veins infus- 

 cated; marginal cilia rather short; discal cilia fine and dense; 

 submarginal vein curving slightly downwards before joining 

 the costa about the middle of the wing; marginal vein very 

 short ; stigmal vein moderately short, very oblique ; postmar- 

 ginal vein twice as long as the stigmal. Antennae 12-jointed; 

 funicle- joints more or less moniliform; 2-9 subequal, slightly 

 wider than long. Length j 1'40 mm. 



Hab. — North Queensland: Pentland. Described from 

 one male caught by sweeping in forest, January 8, 1913 (A. 

 A. Girault). 



This species comes nearest to assimilis, Dodd, but is 

 readily distinguished from that species. 



Type. — I. 2204, South Australian Museum. A male 

 tagmounted, plus a slide bearing head, antennae, and 

 forewings. 



Hadronotus flavicornis, sp. nov. 



9 . Head, posterior half of mesonotum, scutellum, and 

 apical two-thirds of abdomen black; rest of thorax and 

 abdomen reddish-brown; legs and antennae golden-yellow, 

 antennal club brown. Structure as in fumosus, Dodd, but 

 the first abdominal segment is a little the longest. Forewings 

 reaching a little beyond apex of abdomen, moderately broad, 

 the apex rather rounded ; much infuscated, the infuscation 

 deepest near the wing apex; longest marginal cilia equal to 

 one-fifth greatest wing width; discal cilia fine and dense; 

 venation as in fumosus, but the submarginal vein curves fur- 

 ther downwards and the postmarginal is scarcely as long as 

 the stigmal. Antennae 12-jointed; pedicel scarcely longer 

 than wide; funicle- joints as long as the pedicel, all very trans- 

 verse, much wider than long; club 6-jointed, 1-5 much wider 

 than long, first joint very short. Length, 1'25 mm. 



