taxonID	type	description	language	source
907B754A855DFFCA2314FC70EB26F7F5.taxon	materials_examined	Mt. Alifan, April 21, Bryan; Ritidian Point, April 14, 22, Bryan; Piti, April 30, issued from pupa of Sylepta derogata on Hibiscus tiliaceus, Swezey; Piti, May 2, Usinger; Piti, Aug. 2, Sept. 17, reared from Cosmophila flava flava on Urena lobata var. sinuata, Swezey; Mt. Tenjo, May 3, Swezey, Usinger; Inarajan, May 6, Usinger; Mt. Chachao, May 16, Swezey; Agana, May 25, Swezey; Asan, Aug. 8, reared from a Nacoleia diemenalis on an unidentified legume, Swezey; Fadian, Aug. 19, Swezey; Sasa, Sept. 3, reared from pupae of Spodoptera mauritia in rice seedling plot, Swezey; Yigo, Nov. 8, reared from Sylepta derogata, Swezey. Occurring rather commonly.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855DFFCA2314FC70EB26F7F5.taxon	discussion	This species was described from Brazil. There is no record of its occurrence elsewhere except in Guam. It is the species recorded from Guam by me in 1913 as Echthromorpha continua (Brulle) (?). It was recently studied by R. A. Cushman at the U. S. National Museum, from material sent from Guam by R. G. Oakley. Cushman determined it as Echthromorpha conople ~ ra Krieger, so named because of the conical protuberance on the mesopleura which distinguishes it from other species. As no other species of Echthromorpha is known to occur in the Western Hemisphere, and as this species was described from only four specimens in the BerlinMuseum, withpartiallyillegiblelabel, itmaybepossiblethattheloc ~ lity " Brasil " is in error. It will be of great interest to learn of its occurrence in any additional localities.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855DFFCA2319F75EEBC6F607.taxon	materials_examined	Machanao, June 30, Swezey; Piti, July 20, at light, Swezey; Piti, Nov. 3, in garden, Swezey; three specimens.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855DFFCA2319F75EEBC6F607.taxon	discussion	This is a black species described from Guam, and there is no record of, its occurrence elsewhere.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A5FACCEC20F9B2.taxon	materials_examined	Agana Swamp, May 25, Usinger.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A5FACCEC20F9B2.taxon	discussion	Thislargeophionidisknownin JavaandtheEastIndies. Thesinglespecimen collected by Usinger is its first record in Guam.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A2FE77EA0CFD74.taxon	materials_examined	Only one specimen of this cosmopolitan syrphid parasite was obtained at Piti, Sept. 16, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A4F999EACFF81D.taxon	materials_examined	Ritidian Point, April 15, among ferns, one specimen, Bryan.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A4F999EACFF81D.taxon	discussion	This is a European species which has been taken rarely in India, Malay Peninsula, Asiatic Siberia.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A2FCBBEB7BFB48.taxon	materials_examined	Piti, Sept. 13, Nov. 12, 22, at light, three specimens, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFCB23A2FCBBEB7BFB48.taxon	discussion	This ophionid was described from Guam. According to Morley, the F; aniscus samoanus Kohl described from Upolu, Samoa, in 1905 is the same species.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFC823A5F866EB1CFD04.taxon	materials_examined	Tarytia flavo-orbitalis Cameron, Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., Jour. 17: 589, 1907; Morley, Fauna Brit. India, Hym. 3 (1): 506, 1913. Cremastus flavoorbitalis, Cushman, Ent. Soc. Wash., Proc. 35 (5): 73, 1933.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFC823A5F866EB1CFD04.taxon	materials_examined	Mt. Alifan, May 21, reared from Eurrhyparodes tricoloralis (Zeller), a leafroller on a low weed called yerbas babue, Swezey; Mt. Chachao, June 16, reared from a leafroller on Gymnosporia thompsonii, Swezey; Piti, June 22, reared from tortricid larva in pod of Pithecolobium dulce, Swezey; Machanao, June 30, reared from Margaronia multilinealis on Ficus tinctoria, Swezey; Talofofo, Nov. 18, collected among spiny amaranths infested with Hymenia fascialis, one of its favorite hosts, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855CFFC823A5F866EB1CFD04.taxon	discussion	This species has a wide distribution in the Orient from India to Japan. It reached Hawaii as an immigrant, being first noticed in 1910. It was described and known for a long time under the name Cremastus hymeniae Viereck. It was introduced from Japan into the United States as a parasite of the European corn borer, and was also introduced from Japan into Guam in 1931 for the same purpose. It became established, but Mr. Swezey did not rear it from the European · corn borer in 1936. It was, however, reared from several other species of moths.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855FFFC92333FCEDEA9BFE4F.taxon	description	Female 3 mm. long, shining black and, for the most part, highly polished, the legs, mandibles, basal joint of antennae and tegulae pale to golden-yellow, antennae beyond the first joint light brown; smooth throughout except for the fine pin-point punctuation on the face, costae, and carinae on scutellum and propodeum; the face, propodeum laterally and abdomen apically clothed more or less densely with fine silvery-gray hairs. Head transverse, wider than the thorax, width twice the length (as seen from above), eyes large, oval, convex, bare; ocelli lying between on the vertex, arranged in the form of an obtuse triangle, the lateral members removed from the eye margin and from each other about two diameters, anterior member not much over one; frontovertex still wider than long, flat on top, declivous in front; face nearly quadrate but still noticeably wider than long, with the antennae attached at the top and between the eyes at about their middle, in rimmed sockets lying at base of a depression; clypeus not separated but probable line of separation marked by a short sulcus at the sides; antennae 20 - segmented, long and slender, nearly as long as the body, not widely separated at base, basal joint short, stout, apically tangentially excised at outer side and hollowed, the second segment or pedicel sunk in the cup, flagellum filamentous, segments 3 to 5 subequal and four to six times longer than wide, the following segments progressively shorter, the apical segment a little longer and somewhat flattened and pointed; mandibles short, flat, narrowing apically and bidentate, base about equaling in width the malar space; genae and postgenae moderately wide and convex; maxillary palpi slender, 5 - jointed; labial palpi shorter and 3 - or 4 - jointed. Thorax long, moderately wide and deep, prothorax visible from above, extenc \ ed in front in a short neck; mesoscutum as wide as long, convex, margins carinate and perfectly rounded, notauli present extending five sixths the length, converging medially behind but not meeting; scutellum triangular, slightly convex, separated from the scutum by a deep costate groove with ridged sides; metathorax transverse, marked by a transverse depression with ridged anterior and posterior margin; propodeum convex and declivous behind, finely reticulately sculptured and completely areolated, areola closed, a deep fovea directly in front of it, the median area behind it slightly depressed, carinae of lateral margins with an anterior and posterior spinous projection on either side; mesothoracic pleurae with a shallow depression next posterior margin; metathoracic spiracle small, oval. Abdomen elongate, subpetiolate, fusiform, greatest width at apical margin of 2 d segment; 1 st segment the longest, 2 d longer than wide, 3 d wider than long, following shorter, transverse; 1 st segment bent and expanded apically, the spiracle in middle slightly raised at end of lateral groove; ovipositor exserted about one third length of abdomen. Wings hyaline, stigma triangular, moderately wide, areolet incomplete. Legs moderately long and slender.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855FFFC92333FCEDEA9BFE4F.taxon	materials_examined	Piti, May 2, one specimen, holotype female, reared from grass leafroller, Marasmia venilialis, Swezey. Type in collection of Experiment Station, Hawai- TODO TODO TODO TODO	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFC923E6FE39EF66FDCC.taxon	discussion	species	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFC923E6FE39EF66FDCC.taxon	materials_examined	TODO UpiTrail, May 5, swept from ferns, one specimen, Swezey	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFC923BDFC0FEBA0FAAD.taxon	materials_examined	Merizo, May 24, Bryan; Piti, May 10, June 8, Usinger; Piti, May 27, July 13; 27, Swezey; Sumay, Sept. 28, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFC923BDFC0FEBA0FAAD.taxon	discussion	This cosmopolitan parasite of roach oothecae was reported in Guam by Fullaway in 1911.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFC923B8FA75EC6AF8BE.taxon	materials_examined	Dededo, May 11, four specimens, reared from phycitid abundant on leaves of Guettarda speciosa; Agat, May 31, one specimen reared from cocoon on leaf (probably of coconut tineid); TODO Mt. Alifan, June 27, three specimens reared from phycitid on Guettarda; Orote Peninsula, two specimens, reared from leafroller on unidentified tree; Merizo, Oct. 2, one specimen, reared from cocoon of coconut tineid. All collected by Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFC923BAFDB9EF6BFCA7.taxon	materials_examined	Upi Trail, May 5, swept from f ~ rns, one male, Swezey; Orote Point, May 24, one female, Swezey; Machanao, June 4, one female, Swezey; Sinajana, June 15, one malt:, Swezey. There may be more than one species.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFCE23BDF887ECC8FB16.taxon	description	Female 3 mm. long, shining black, basal third of abdomen, legs, antennae, and mandibles brown, the mandibular teeth black, flagellum of the antennae fuscous, as are also the hind coxae, apical half of hind tibiae, and the tarsi; covered with a close microscopic silky pubescence, although the disk of the scutellum and the mesopleurae are, fo 1 · the most part, bare; variously sculptured. Head transverse, wide as thorax, about twice as wide as long (as viewed from above), eyes oval, convex, hairy, ocelli on the vertex in the form of an obtuse triangle, lateral members less than one diameter apart but removed from eye margins about four, frontovertex twice as wide as long, convex, finely striate, excavated in front for the antenna! scrobes, face only a little wider than long, also striate, clypeus below indicated by a shallow linear impression with pit on either side, antennae attached at top and at about middle distance of eyes, widely separated and not far from eyes, about two thirds length of body, consisting of 16 segments, the basal segment quite stout, following segments filamentous and decreasing in length outwardly, mandibles fairly stout and toothed apically, the width of base much less than that of malar space, genae and postgenae fairly wide, convex, striate, smoothly rounded to occipital margin, which is distinctly carinate, maxillary palpi 5 - jointed, labial palpi 3 - jointed, white. Thorax stout, fairly long and deep, pronotum transverse, collarlike, hardly visible from above, mesonotum wider than long, convex above, declivous in front, finely punctuate and in part striate, scutellum triangular, convex, a transverse row of circular pits along the basal margin; metanotum transverse, the anterior and posterior margins of the apical half carinate with a costate groove between, basal half on either side of the scutellum also costate, propodeum about as long as metanotum, flat on top, declivous behind and on the sides, coarsely rugulose. Abdomen as long as head and thorax combined, corbiculate, elongate oval, the tergum convex, the ventrites basally collapsed against the tergites leaving a hollow cavity, the tergum without indication of segmentation and generally rugoso-striate, ovipositor exserted and about half the length of the abdomen. Legs fairly long and stout, the hind pair much larger than the fore and middle pairs. Wings hyaline, stigma large, triangular, more than half as wide as long, with the parastigma, which is quite conspicuous, as long as the metacarp, radial cell not nearly reaching apex of wing, recurrent nervure interstitial with 1 st cubital crossvein, 1 st cubital and discoidal not separated, subdiscoidal nervure not interstitial but joining the discoidal below the middle of the apical section, nervulus postfurcal.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855EFFCE23BDF887ECC8FB16.taxon	materials_examined	Sumay Road, July 15, holotype female, Swezey. Type in collection of Experiment Station, Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8559FFCE2330F908EA8BF724.taxon	materials_examined	Inarajan, May 7, 14, June 25, reared from rice leafroller, Susumia exigua, Swezey; Dededo, May 11, reared from corn leafroller, Marasmia trapezalis, Swezey; Mt. Alifan, May 26, reared from corn leafroller, Swezey; Piti, July 13, reared from Pyrausta phoenicealis, a leafroller on Elephantopus spicatus, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8559FFCE2330F908EA8BF724.taxon	discussion	This braconid was described from Guam. It was collected by Fullaway in 1911, and was quite common in 1936.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8559FFCE2333F712EF60F6F1.taxon	materials_examined	Ypan, June 8, one specimen reared from Hymenia fascialis, Swezey; Talofofo, Nov. 18, four specimens reared from Hymenia fascialis, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8559FFCE2332FB67EF23FA96.taxon	materials_examined	Inarajan, May 14, one specimen, reared from bean leafminer, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8559FFCE2330F9DDEA4DF93F.taxon	materials_examined	Mt. Chachao, June 16, one specimen, reared from leafroller on Gymnosporia thompsonii, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8559FFCE2333FAE5EBECFA73.taxon	discussion	Described from a single specimen collected in Guam by Fullaway in 1911; not collected in 1936.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B9FEF1EC5BFDC7.taxon	materials_examined	Tarague, May 17, one specimen, swept from grass, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B9FEF1EC5BFDC7.taxon	discussion	8. Apanteles species.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B9FEF1EC5BFDC7.taxon	materials_examined	Agana, May 4, one specimen, Swezey; Orate Peninsula, Aug. 2, one specimen, reared from leafminer in Ipomoea, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B7F900EB09F7C3.taxon	materials_examined	Machanao, June 4, Usinger; Barrigada, June 12, four specimens reared from cocoons found in cerambycid burrows in dead trunk of Hibiscus tiliaceus, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B7F900EB09F7C3.taxon	discussion	This species was also described from Hawaii. We procured five specimens in Guam.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B5FA86EBBCF936.taxon	materials_examined	Piti, May 2, one collected on Pithecolobium dulce, Usinger; Upi Trail, May 5, one specimen swept from ferns, Swezey; Fadian, Sept. 18, 21 reared from a mass of cocoons in burrow of Ceresium unicolor in log of paipay, Swezey.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B5FA86EBBCF936.taxon	discussion	This species was described from Hawaii, where it is parasitic on larvae of cerambycid beetles.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B4FB00EF14FAB7.taxon	description	Tarague, May 17, three specimens swept from grass, Swezey	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCF23B9FDB2EB13FB36.taxon	discussion	This braconid was described from Manila, and now is recorded from Guam for the first time. Ritidian Point, Aug. 6, reared from the fruitfly Dacus ochrosiae Malloch in Ochrosia sp. Search was made for it in other parts of the island. The fruitfly was reared from Ochrosia fruits from several places, but no other parasites were obtained except the first ones. In November 1937, R. G. Oakley reported that the parasite had been recovered from infested Ochrosia fruits at Orate Point, and infested Ximenia fruits between Dededo aqd Yigo.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCC23B4F7B3E8F2F716.taxon	description	Female: 4 mm. long, yellowish brown to brown to reddish brown to black, tegulae and legs stramineous brown with tarsi fuscous; antennae fuscous brown, sheath of ovipositor fuscous brown; mandibles brown with black tips; wings hyaline. Head a little wider than the thorax, a little wider than long, extended somewhat behind the eyes, which are short oval, convex and bare; ocelli arranged in a small obtuse triangle just below the suinmit of the head and about half way between the insertion of antennae and vertical margin, distance between lateral members about one third distance to eye margin; frontovertex convex above, smooth and polished, declivous in front of ocelli, where the surface is rugoso-striate except for a narrow strip along eye margin, behind highly polished and smoothly rounded on to occiput, which has the margin strongly carinate on the sides; face more or less in the vertical plane although somewhat retracterl below, wider than long, widening out below to about 1.5 times the width at its upper limit, finely aciculate and rugulose, and hairy; clypeus small, distinctly separated, anterior margin carinate and slightly curved;. mandibles below oral orifice short, stout, apically pointed, basal width about equaling that of malar space; antennae attached at middle distance of eyes behind a frontal prominence, the sockets oval, fairly far and wide apart, rather close to eye margin with a deep groove or depression between, a little longer than the body, consisting of 35 segments, which decrease in length gradually from 3 d segment outwardly although the first three segments of the flagellum are hardly different in length, segments 1 and 2 are stout, the flagellum slender; maxillary palpi long ahd slender, 5 - jointed; labial palpi shorter, 3 - segmented, genae and postgenae quite wide. Prothorax prominent with the anterior and posterior margins carinate, the saddle rather coarsely reticulately sculptured; mesoscutum longer than wide, convex, its surface shagreened; parapsidal furrows deep, converging and confluent before reaching posterior margin; scutellum scutate, that is, triangular but apically truncate with a wide and deep costate furrow at base, disk slightly convex, sculpture microscopically fine; metanotum a transverse furrow with posterior margin strongly carinate; propodeum nearly as long as mesoscutum, convex, rugulose, areolated, the central areola pentagonal with apex directed anteriorly, this and several other areolae striate; spiracles minute, circular; mesopleurae smooth and shining below, striate above, a row of circular fossae along the carinated posterior margin, duplicated on the margin of the side of the propodeum. Abdomen elongate oval, more or less depressed, petiolate, the petiole rather short, 1 st abdominal segment one third the length of the abdomen, bent near the middle where the spiracle is, somewhat flat, narrow basally but widening apically to twice the basal width, the tergite rugoso-striate, 2 d segment about three fourths as long as 1 st but wider than long, following tergites transverse, smooth, and shining behind the first; ovipositor as long as or possibly a little longer than the abdomen. Legs fairly stout, spinulose. Wings rather long and narrow, stigma large, lanceolate, recurrent nervure received at lower inside angle of 2 d cubital cell, which is five-sided, long, and narrow, only half as wide at base as it is apically; nervulus slightly postfurcal, radius reaching al,) ical TODO TODO TODO Male: similar except in pygidial characters peculiar to the sex, though generally smaller and with fewer antenna! segments (28 - 30).	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A8558FFCC23B4F7B3E8F2F716.taxon	materials_examined	Machanao, June 30, described from 19 females and two males (holotype, allotype, and paratypes) reared from two clusters of cocoons in burrows of cerambycid collected under bark of Elaeocarpus joga log, Swezey. Types in the collection of the Experiment Station, Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
907B754A855BFFCC2327F776ECC4F618.taxon	materials_examined	Upi Trail, May 5, from ferns, one female, Swezey; Mt. Chachao, May 16, two females, Usinger; Machanao, June 2, miscellaneous sweeping, three females, Swezey. These may include more than one species.	en	Fullaway, D. T. (1946): Ichneumonidae, Evaniidae, And Braconidae Of Guam. In: Insects of Guam II. Honolulu, Hawaii: Bernice P. Bishop Museum: 221-227, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5156759
