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MEMOmS OF THE QUEEESLAHV MUSEUM, 
abdomen. The punctures on the scutum in 'brishancnsis are finer than those on the other two 
species. In all of them, the cephalic ocellus is within the scrobicular cavity. 
Male : — Not known. 
From two females taken January 17, 1912 and January 27, 1912 (H. Hacker). 
Habitat : Brisbane, Queensland. 
Types: No. Hy^749, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimens on a tag. 
7. PERILAMPUS AQUILONARIS new species. 
Male: — Length, 1.50 mm. 
Agrees with Walker’s saleius but the head and abdomen are dark blue and most probably 
not that species j tibiae yellowish bro^m, tarsi yellow j femora concolorous ; thorax aeneous green. 
Fore wings slightly stained throughout. Scape metallic green, also the pedicel; rest of antenna 
rich brown; fimicle 1 subquadrate, 6 somewhat wider than long. Head smooth but with con- 
spicuous short pubescence. Axillm with only the extreme mesal angle punctate (usually some- 
what more in the other species), the rest scaly and with a lateral aspect. Abdomen smooth. 
Postmarginal vein twice the length of the stigmal or nearly, subequal to the marginal. Pro- 
podeum with a median earina with fovese down each side of it, the first ones large, followed 
laterad by smaller ones, the fourth transverse, then two with others following laterad bounding 
the large iinpunetate area on each side of meson which is scaly, its edges just within the circle 
-of bounding fovese and carinate. 
FmaZe:— Not known. 
Described from one male taken in forest, November 10, 1913 (G. F. Hill). 
Habitat: Port Darwin, Northern Territory. 
Type: No. HyB750, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen on a tag. 
8. PERILAMPUS RELIQUUS new species. 
Female: — Length, 2.75 mm. 
^neous green, the wings hyaline; head, abdomen, cox® and femora very dark blue-black. 
Head smooth, also abdomen. Occiput finely, circularly striate. Caudal aspect, obscure pin- 
punctures on abdomen dorso-latnrad mesad of margins, this aspect consisting of but two 
segments, the second or distal very small (really segments 2 and 3). 
Differs from qucenslandensis m that the tibi® are not dark metallic but reddish brown, 
•washed along the middle dorsad with dark metallic green ; the antenme are not wholly dark but 
the distal three fuuicle joints reddish brown ventrad, also base of club; the body is more robust, 
the abdomen dark gr<?e!i, the scutum coppery. Differs from levifacics in that the ocelli are more 
distinctly in a triangle, the tibia? are not dark metallic, the thorax is dark metallic green. Prom 
aquilonnris in that the venation is dark, the flagellum mostly so, the upper face bare or nearly, 
the tibiio metallic dorsad centrally. All fonr species have the disk of parapsides glabrous. 
Funicle 1 slightly shorter than the pedicel, slightly wider than long, the others slightly 
shortening in succession distad. 
Prom one female captured by sweeping swamp in forest, May 14, 1914 (A. P. Dodd). 
Habitat: Chindera (Tweed River), New South Wales. 
Type: No. HyS751, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, the specimen on a tag; antennee on a 
slide. 
The species tasmaniensis measures 2.50 mm.; australiensis, 3.25 mm.; mittagongensis, 
1.85 mm. The fiery red spots ” on tasynaiiicus Cameron are not red but merely highly metallic 
spots which would vary.^ 
' A. P., Dodd. 
