1922] 
Brues — Parasitic Hymenoptera from Fiji 
13 
fcenus, giving a translation of Westwoods original description 
which did not enable him to place the species generically. 
the type and only species so far referred to Iiemifoenus is 
from Australia. No specimens are available for comparison, but 
from Kieffer’s comprehensive description 1 it is evident that the 
Fijian species differs in several respects from his H. brevithorax. 
The eyes are pubescent, not bare and the posterior femora are 
but slightly swollen, scarcely “keulenformig” as in H. brevi- 
thorax. Unfortunately all the known examples are males and the 
type species is known in the opposite sex only, which might 
account for these rather pronounced differences. Turner’s type 
is also a male although both sexes of darwinii are known. 
Evania impressa Schletterer. 
Ann. Hofmus. Wien, vol. 4, p. 153 (1889) 
Enderlein, Arch. Naturges. 1901, p. 191. 
Bradley, Trans. Amer. Ent. Soc., vol. 34, p. 173 ( Acan - 
thinevania) 
Kieffer, Das Tierreich, Lief. 30, p. 109 (1912). 
Turner, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1918, p. 342. 
Two males and two females from Lasema, Fiji (W. M. Mann). 
Both females and one male show a distinct, although very short, 
median keel on the face just below the antennae and the ab- 
dominal petiole in all is distinctly longer than the distance from 
its base to the base of the propodeum. The Fijian examples 
therefore approach the Australian E. angulata Schlett. which I 
am inclined to believe is not a distinct species. 
Family Braconidce. 
Exobracon nitidulus sp. nov. 
$ Length 7-9 mm.; ovipositor 4-5 mm. Head, prothorax and 
first segment of abdomen, except tip, pale yellow; thorax bright 
ferruginous; abdomen, beyond petiole black above, except for a 
narrow white band just before apex; venter white between the 
small, white sclerites; sheaths of ovipositor black; antennal 
lAnn. Soc. Ent. France, vol. 80, p. 182 (1911) and Das Tierreich, Lief, 30, p. 192 (1912). 
