3li MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
of second tergite ; head large and broad ; face light yellow except the supra- 
clypeal area and a narrow band part-way down each side of clypeus ; a short 
elevated yellow keel between the antennae ; lateral marks ending very broadly 
at about level of antennae ; small yellow spots behind upper part of eyes ; 
lower margin of clypeus black, with lateral tubercles, and overhung by a black- 
edged very broadly and shallowly emarginate lamina, having at each side a 
rounded shining black tubercle (the whole structure similar in principle to that 
in C. brisbanensis) ; scape curved, black, with a subapical reddish spot in 
front ; flagellum dark above, but apex above, and whole under side, bright 
ferruginous : thorax black, closely punctured (less so on scutellum) ; prothorax 
with a small crescentic yellow mark on each side above, but no other yellow 
markings on thorax ; area of metathorax somewhat shining, with a median 
sulcus, which is finely cross-ribbed, and the surface of the area finely plicatulate 
and showing some punctures ; mesopleura simple ; tegulse chrome yellow, with 
a basal reddish spot : wings greyish hyaline, dusky in marginal cell and beyond; 
stigma reddish black ; second cubital cell very broad, receiving recurrent 
nervure a little before middle ; legs basally black, but knees and tibiae bright 
ferruginous ; anterior and middle tarsi pale reddish, hind tarsi red, the small 
joints partly infuseated ; petiole black, rugose, longer than broad, its hind 
margin narrowly red ; second tergite black in middle, red at sides, with two 
large triangular yellow spots basally ; third black ; fourth black- with a broad 
apical yellow band ; fifth dusky red, with base black, and a narrow imperfect 
apical yellow band ; apex dark, the broad pygidial plate reddish. 
Stanthorpe, Queensland, July 31, 1924 (F. A. Perkins). Named after 
Sir John Goodwin. Governor of Queensland, an excellent naturalist, in recognition 
of his interest in the work of the entomologists. It is allied to the last species, 
but quite distinct. Also at Stanthorpe, Feb. 1, 1926, was taken a female 
C. minuscula Turner. The tegulse in both sexes are very bright ferruginous. 
