HYMENOPTERA FROM SARAWAK. 141 
Comes near to Yanthopimpla which may be known from it 
by the orbits being straight and oblique, not rounded, by the 
occiput being transverse, not roundly incised, by the abdomen 
being distinctly punctured and marked with transverse furrows 
and by the scutellum being keeled along the sides. The middle 
vein in the hind wings is, like the others, distinct to the apex. 
Pecilopimpla lucida, sp. nov. 
Luteous, the ocellar region, the vertex broadly behind them, 
three broad marks on the mesonotum, occupying almost all the 
lobes, a small central and a larger mark on either side on the base 
of the metanotum, all three rounded at the apex, the base of the 
propleure, the abdominal segments broadly, the base and apex 
of the four hinder femora and tibiz and the hinder tarsi, black. 
Wings hyaline, the nervures and stigma black. Antenne 
black, the scape yellow, the flazellum brownish beneath. 6. 
Length 10 mm. 
Hab. Kuching. 
Face closely punctured, roundly concave, keeled in the mid- 
dle. Parapsidal furrows distinct at the base only. Median 
segment smooth and shining, the areola square, the tooth bear- 
ing area confluent with that at the base. Abdomen smooth and 
shining ; the 2nd segment is deeply furrowed in the middle at 
the base ; its oblique lateral furrows are smooth. 
XORIDINI. 
Cyanoxorides, gen. NOV. 
Antenne stout, densely covered with short stiff pubescence : 
the 3rd joint hardly longer than the 4th, the apex from the 20th 
joint geniculated, bent back and separated from the rest like the 
lash of a whip. Clypeus short, broad, clearly separated from the 
face, depressed ; its apex transverse. There is a stout keel be- 
tween the antenne. Occiput not very distinctly margined. | 
Mandibles edentate, broad at the base, becoming gradually nar- 
rowed towards the apex. Mesonotum trilobate. Median seg- 
ment areolated ; the central area extends from-the base to the 
apex and has the apical half much wider than the basal. Spira- 
cles linear. The apical half of the mesosternum separated from 
R. A. Soc., No. 39, 1902. 
