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S6 Journal New York Entomological Society. [VoI. xi. CLASSIFICATION OF THE POINTED-TAILED WASPS, OR THE SUPERFAMILY PROCTOTRYPOIDEA.— III. By William H. Ashmead, A.M. Assistant Curator, U. S. National Museum, Washington, D. C. Family LVI. SCELIONID.F:. The position of the antennae, which are inserted low down on the face or close to the clypeus, and the shape of the abdomen, which is always acute or margined along the sides, the tergites and sternites where they unite usually forming a fold or carina, will at once dis-tinguish the wasps belonging to this family, from those which follow. The family comes quite close to the family Platygateridce, the two having been classified together as a singe family by Haliday, but it may be easily separated from that family by abdominal peculiarities, by the differences in the antennae, and by the totally different vena-tion of the front wings. The family Scelionidee is one of the most extensive, being widely distributed over the entire world, with many genera and species but imperfectly studied. All of the species, without a single exception are egg-parasites of other insects, the Lepidoptera, Hemiptera, Or-thoptera and Neuroptera especially being the ones most frequently attacked by them ; other orders, however, are not exempted from their attacks, and one little group, the Baeinae, destroy the eggs of various spiders (Arachnida). Table of Subfamilies. 1. Abdomen always with a distinct lateral carina 2 Abdomen without a distinct lateral carina, although more or less acute, in shape most frequently broadly oval, rarely pointed ovate, but depressed, the second segment always the largest and longest ; front wings with the post-marginal and stigmal veins long; 9 with II -jointed antenna?, rarely l2-jointed, clavate or subclavate ; ^ antennse 12-jointed Subfamily I. TELENOMIN^-E. 2. Abdomen sessile, most frequently long, fusiform or bnear, extending beyond the tip of the wings when folded, rarely broadly oval, the segments more nearly equal, or the third segment is the longest, although rarely much longer than some one of the others ; post-marginal vem usually present, rarely wanting, if wanting the submarginal vein ends in a stigma 3

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Classification of the Pointed-Tailed Wasps, or the Superfamily Proctotrypoidea. III

William H Ashmead
Journal of The New York Entomological Society 11: 86-99 (1903)

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