tlEEMAPTERA. 
isi 
unarmed in one, with a meso-distal tooth in one). Stephansort, Astrolabe 
Bay, New Guinea, 1897, (Biro), 1 <$, determined by Burr as grandis (macrop- 
terous, forceps unarmed). Siwai, Bougainville Island, X, 1, 1922, (E. 0. 
Pocklcy), I -J (short tegmina, no wings, forceps with a meso-distal tooth). 
Ysabel Island, Solomon Islands, Y, 30, 1925, (N. S. Hefferman), 1 $ 
(macropterous), [Austral. Mus.]. Kuranda, Queensland, (F. P. Dodd), 10 
10$ (macropterous; male forceps unarmed in seven, with a meso-distal tooth 
in three). 
Marava fese (Dubrony). 
This insect, though smaller anti with very distinct male genitalia, agrees 
fully with Marava icallacei in all generic features. The pyriform antennal joints 
prevent the association with Spongovostox indicated by Burr in 1911. 
Kuranda, Queensland, (Dodd), 1 <£, 1 ?, determined by Burr (tegmina 
short and whitish disto-laterad wings absent ; male eurylabic) ; (F. P. Dodd), 
7 12 $ (macropterous, tegmina uniform black, wings buff proximo-laterad ; 
three males eurylabic, three intermediate, one stenolabic). 
C'HELISOCHIN.'E. 
Hamaxas nigrorufus (Burr). 
Burr was correct in assigning this species to Hamaxas in 1915, but 
Mjoberg repeated the original incorrect assignment to SpongipTiora in 1924. 
Mt. Lamington, Northern Div., Papua, V and VII, 1927, (C. Y. 
McNamara ; one at light), 1 <J, 3 $, [Austral. Mus.]. 
The limits of distribution of this species are now known to be Queensland 
and Hawaii. 
Proreus duruoides new species. Text-figures 1 and 2. 
This insect is readily separated from other Australian species by the 
general dark coloration, red-brown antennae and limbs, huffy wings, abdomen 
with caudal margins of tergites very finely tuberculate, ultimate tergite 
nodulose distad and male forceps which curve outward and downward and 
then converging straighten out distad, these forceps very similar to those 
developed in males of the American genus Doru. 
The species agrees closely with Chelisoches, its decidedly smaller size and 
general appearance indicating that it had best be referred to the very closely 
related Proreus. 
Type . — $ ; Kuranda, Queensland, Australia. February 3, 1925. (F. P. 
Dodd). [Hebard Collection Type No. 1220.] 
Size medium for the genus, form slender as in the genotype, only 
moderately depressed . Head large, slightly broader than pronotum, moderately 
flattened, evenly weakly convex dorsad to very weak extensive depressions 
