January, 1939 The Queensland Naturalist 19 
coxae and femora black. Metatarsus equal to the middle 
tibial spur and to the first segment of the middle tarsus. 
Two females, Perth, W. Australia, from coccids, L. J* 
Newman. 
Physcus atrithorax nov. 
Belongs to those species with a black head and is 
the same as addisoni, except that the forelegs and the club 
are black. The abdomen is also margined with black for 
basal three-fourths. A single example reared from Cero - 
plastes rubens on) Eugenia at Brisbane in June. 
Anagyropsis smaragdus nov. 
Belongs to that section of the genus where the ovi- 
positor is not or barely extruded, rather is shortly ex- 
truded (i or less of the abdomen) and the scape is only 
moderately, convexly dilated (clavate) and runs to hardyi, 
but the first funiele segment is only a half longer than 
wide and shorter than the pedicel. Queanbeyan, N.S. 
Wales, in November, from the eggs of Gonipterus , A. L. 
Tonnoir. 
Anagyropsis spondyliaspidis nov. 
In my modernised synopsis, runs to dius and dyari* 
differing from the former in that the segments of the 
funiele are slightly longer than wide, slightly shorter than 
the pedicel, the antennae black except apices of scape and 
pedicel, hairless line with 5-6 lines of coarser cilia, closed 
by two lines caudad; bristles of the sub-marginal vein 
moderately gross ; spiracle of the abdomen somewhat proxi- 
mad of the middle. Ovipositor shortly extruded. The 
males bear antennal segments Nos. 1-2 and 6 much shortest. 
Nos. 1-2 large, unequal “ring-joints,” club solid (joints 
of the funiele otherwise). The male scape is only thick; 
segments Nos. 1-2 of the funiele are each smaller than the 
globular pedicel, while Nos. 3-5, most of the scape and the 
club apically are silvery; else the male is like the other 
sex. Pairs reared at Black Mountain, F.C.T., from 
Spondyliaspis eucalypti , Dobson, by Mr. J. W. Evans, in 
December, 1929. The host is a Psyllid, and accounts for 
the frequent finding of members of this genus upon the 
leaves of Eucalyptus in close proximity to the cases of this 
kind of insect. 
The following species have been received for identifi- 
cation from various sources and need publication. A note 
upon a Javanese insect, Gupelmus grayi Girault brevicinc- 
tus nov., is also added. 
This variety is like the original description and 
diagnosis (later) of the typical form, but the white part 
of the ovipositor valves is short, not half the distal black 
and distinctly shorter than the basal; the middle femora 
