164 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 



black. Differs from fiavinotce and perlatipenne in bearing distinctly longer marginal cilia oni 

 the fore wing. 



The males of Stetliynium may be distinguished from the males of Paranaphoidea by 

 the characteristic shape of the fore wings and the arrangement of the longer marginal cilia. 

 Otherwise, they are very much alike. 



Genus ANAPHOIDEA Girault. 



1. ANAPHOIDEA GALTONI Girault. 



Male: — Black, the wings hyaline, clouded along proximal half, the scape, pedicel and 

 legs dusky brown, the antennas otherwise black, the funicle joints a little over twice longer 

 than wide. Same as the female. 



From one male captured with the female type specimen. 



Genus ANAPHES Haliday. 



1. ANAPHES MAZZININI new species. 

 Female: — Length, 0.50 mm. 



In general like the North American gracilis and A^ery similar to the Australian "kantiv 

 from which it differs as follows: The head except vertex and all of thorax except cephalic 

 third of scutum are golden yellow, the exceptions black or nearly; distal half of abdomen 

 black. Club and caudal femur dusky; rest of legs and antennae pale yellow. The fore wings 

 are somewhat broader, their discal ciliation apparently absent but sparse and very faint — a 

 long line along cephalic margin and scattered cilia in the cephalic half of the blade. The 

 antenna? are similar in structure. Strigil present. The fore wings are a little broader than. 

 tlieir longest marginal cilia (a little narrower in Tcantii). 



Habitat: Capeville (Pentland), Queensland. Forest, December 26, 1912. 



Type: No. Hy%467, Queensland Museum, the female on a slide. 



Genus PAEANAGEUS Perkins. 



1. PARANAGRUS OPTABILIS Perkins. 



Pasoeroean, Java. Associated with the eggs of Dicranotropis vastatrix Breddi on 

 sugar-cane. 



ANAGEOIDEA new genus. 



Female: — Like Anagrus Haliday but the scutellum is preceded by a selerite which is 

 nearly as long as itself, both wider than long, the antennae inserted at the clypeus, the scape 

 elongate, also funicle 1 and the club, the latter nearly as long as the funicle; no phragma; 

 the abdomen depressed ovate, subpetiolate, the second segment occupying over a third of the 

 surface, the ovipositor not exserted. Strigils present. Mandibles slender, bidentate. Fore 

 wings as in Anaphes but their marginal cilia short. Caudal wings very broad, the blade 

 shaped like an ordinary table-knife. Body with rather rough sculpture. Caudal tibial spurs 

 double. Tarsi 4-jointed. Male antennas filiform, 13-jointed. Black. With the habitus of 

 certain scelionids. 



Type: Eustoclms dvbius Girault. 



1. ANAGROIDEA DUBIA (Girault). 



Eustochus dubius Girault, first supplement, pp. 128-129. 



The female is like the male except the 9-jointed antennas as described in the foregoing. 



The vertex is finely transversely lined, the propodeum rugose. One specimen, Gordonvale 



(Cairns). Queensland, forest (2,600 feet), June, 1913. The type is a male, the type locality 



Gordonvale. 



