1935 ] 
New Ants from the Philippines 
48 
Sculpture and pilosity as in the worker except that the 
whole thorax above is foveolate-punctate like the head, and 
the thorax, nodes of pedicel and gaster are darker and less 
yellowish, being as dark as the head. Wings grayish ; veins 
brown, pterostigma dark brown. 
Described from eight workers and four females col- 
lected by Mr. L. M. Morato at Dansalan, on Lanao Island, 
Philippines, and received from Dr. J. W. Chapman. 
Dilobocondyla chapman! Wheeler subsp. rufobrunnea 
subsp. nov. 
Worker. Length 3.8 mm. 
Differing from the typical chapmani in its slightly larger 
size, slightly more opaque surface throughout and in colora- 
tion, being dark brown, with the pronotum above paler and 
more rufous, the mandibles, except the teeth, the sides of 
the clypeus, scapes, first funicular joint and tarsi beyond 
their first joint, brownish yellow. 
Female. Length 4.5 mm. 
Very similar to the worker, but the gular surface of the 
head and the thorax are paler and more reddish than the 
head and gaster, the postscutellum and posterior portion of 
the mesonotum infuscated. Wings shorter than the body, 
whitish, with pale brown veins and dark brown petero- 
stigma. The radial cell is short and closed, there is a single 
cubital but no discoidal cell. 
Male. Length 4.3 mm. 
Head broader than long, transversely elliptical, with large 
eyes and moderately large ocelli. Cheeks short and strongly 
converging anteriorly. Mandibles well-developed, flattened, 
5-toothed, the two basal teeth small. Clypeus broad, feebly 
convex, its anterior border broadly rounded, entire, sinuate 
on each side. Frontal area large; frontal carinate short, 
low and subparallel. Antennse long, 13-jointed; scapes very 
short, only about twice as long as broad; first funicular 
slightly longer than broad, not swollen, remaining joints 
cylindrical, the second twice as long as the scapes, the 
remaining joints shorter, except the last, which is nearly as 
long as the second and somewhat swollen. Thorax through 
the mesonotum somewhat broader than the head ; pronotum 
