104 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
transverse stripes more or less confluent; wings subliy aline ; longest marginal 
cilia of fore wing a little over half those wings’ greatest width; antennae ending 
in the usual large seta; funicle joint slightly shorter than the pedicel; discal 
eiliation of fore wing distinct, about eleven lines, mostly regular. Substigmal 
spot short. Funicle joint longer than proximal club joint. 
Head, meso- and metapleura, coxa? and distal half or more of hind femora 
sooty or dusky. Legs otherwise tawny. Antenna? dusky. Cephalic part of 
scutum dusky. Allied with aurea but the fore wings are broader, less densely 
ciliated, the cilia shorter, all the coxa? black; the fore wing is really obscurely, 
slightly infumated, somewhat distinctly so under the submarginal vein proximad 
of the bend from which there projects a short blackish dot; no distinct stripes. 
Male : — Not known. 
Described from one female captured by sweeping in the forest along the 
foothills of the coast range, July 9, 1913 (A. P. Dodd). Dedicated to Jules 
Henri Poincare. 
Habitat: Nelson (Cairns), Queensland. 
Type: No. Uy 1602, Queensland Museum, the above specimen on a slide 
(with the type of Encarsia justitia Girault). 
PSEUDOLIGOSITA new genus. 
Female : — Like OUgosita Haliday but the fore wings broader, their marginal 
cilia short and the pedicel and funicle joint of the antenme are elongate, the 
funicle joint twice or more longer than w T ide. 
Male : — Not known. 
Type: The following species. 
1. PSEUDOLIGOSITA ARNOLDI new species. Genotype. 
Female: — Length, 1-00 mm. Robust for the family. 
Orange yellow, the wings hyaline; pedicel and funicle subequal; fore 
wings with about fifteen lines of discal cilia, the lines more or less irregular; 
longest marginal cilia of fore wing less than a sixth the wing’s greatest width. 
Hind wings with one long midlongitudinal line of discal cilia and a second half 
to three quarters complete one at the cephalic margin. Abdomen with about 
six black cross-stripes. Legs and antenme coneolorous. 
Described from one female on a slide in the collections of the Queensland 
Museum, labelled “ Sweeping undergrowth, mostly eucalyptus, April 16, 1913. 
H. Hacker.” 
Habitat: Brisbane, Queensland. 
