302 
ZOOLOGICAL LITERATURE. 
1. c. p. 101, Illinois; M. pulcherrimusy ibid., Connecticut; M. decenSy ibid., 
Connecticut, Virginia ; 31. ? muliebris, 1. c. p. 102, Virginia ; 3f. ? licvegrinus, 
ibid., Connecticut, New Jersey; M.? iynotus, 1. c. p. 103, Virginia ; 31.? 
nastutus (sic), ibid., Pennsylvania. 
3fesoleptus. Cresson describes the following as new species from Mexico : — 
31. calidus, 1. c. p. 33 ; 31. melleus, harduSy and mibecillis, 1. c. p. 34 ; 31. ema- 
ceralus and decorosus, 1. c. p. 36 ; and 3d. ? buccphalus, 1. c. p. 36. 
Catoglyplus idlrichi, Tschek, 1. c. p. 437, Vienna I 
Ctenopelma variabilis, Tschek, 1. c. p. 440, and C. defectivay Tschek, 1. e. 
p. 443, Lower Austria. 
3Iesohius epliippiuniy Tschek, 1. c. p. 445, Lower Austria. 
Tryphon croceivmtrisy Cresson, /. c. p. 36, and 2\ ? laticinctuSy Cresson, ibid., 
Mexico. 
Tryphon. Cresson describes the following new North -American species 
of this genus; — 2\ communis, 1. c. p. 103, Hudson’s Bay to Pennsylvania; 
T. scutellaris, 1. c. p. 104, Connecticut ; T. varifrons, ibid., Massachusetts, 
Connecticut ; T. siynatipes, 1. c. p. 105, Hudson’s Bay Territory ; T. com- 
pressioentris, ibid., Massachusetts, Connecticut ; T. buryessi, ibid., Massachu- 
setts; T. tarsalis, 1. c. p. 106, Connecticut; T. Oithiops, ibid., Massachusetts, 
Connecticut; T. ? nasidtis, 1. c. p. 107, Illinois; 'T. ? riijithoracicus, ibid., Cuba; 
T. crassus, ibid., INIassachusetts, New Jersey; T. dimidiatus, 1. c. p. 108, New 
Jersey, Pennsylvania ; 2\ cmmdipes, ibid., Great Slave Lake ; T. burrus, ibid., 
Connecticut; T. subcrassus, 1. c. p. 109, New-England States; 'T. occidentuUs, 
ibid., Illinois; T.frontcdis, ibid., Connecticut; 2\ philantlioidcs, 1. c. p. 110, 
Illinois ; and T. articidatus, ibid., IIudson’s-Bay Territory. 
Exyston clavatus, Cresson, 1. c. p. 113, Maine, New York, Illinois, &c. 
PJiygadenon scoticus, Marshall, Ent. M. Mag. v. p. 164, Perthshire ; Ph. 
errator, Marshall, ibid., near London. 
Aptesis yraviceps, Marshall, 1. c. p. 155, and A. stenoptera, Marshall, 1. c. 
p. 156, Milford Haven. 
Campoplex. Eorster (Verb, zool.-bot. Ges. in Wipn, xviii. pp. 776-870) 
describes 69 new species of this genus, as restricted Jjy Holmgren ; tliey are 
chiefly from the neighbourhood of Aix-la-Chapt;lle. It would be useless to 
cite their names. 
ClIALCIDIDAi:. 
Sc UDDER notices the occurrence of parasites of this family in the eggs of 
(Edipoda Carolina. Proc. Boat. Soc. Nat. Hist. xii. p. 99. 
Tineophaga, g. n., Ilondani, Ann. Soc. Nat. Modena, iii. p. 22 (subf. En- 
cyrtincc?). Antennte 7-jointed, joint 1 of flagellum short, remainder sub- 
ovate $, or oblong <J, 2-4 in S' with long, timbriate filaments; fore wings 
with costal vein very slender, its apical branch dilated ; abdomen subacumi- 
nate at apex, somewhat incurved above, narrowed at base; legs simple, 
intermediate tibiae unicalcarate ; tarsi 5-jointed. Sp. T. tischerice, sp. n.^ 
Ilondani, 1. c. p. 23, pi. 4. figs. 3-7 (details), parasitic on Tischeria com- 
planella. 
Pelccinella, g. n., Westwood, Proc. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1868, p. xxxv. Allied 
to Callimome ; body very long, nearly filiform ; head subglobose ; antennae 
11-jointed, 2 and 3 minute, 4 long, subcompressed ; collar twice as long as 
head, very narrow ; segments 2 and 3 of abdomen a little incrassate, its apex 
with two large foliaceous lobes; ovipositor nearly as long as abdomen. 
