S. Mahunka szerk.: Folia Entomologica Hungarica 55. (Budapest, 1994)
Genus Apterogyna Latreille, 1809 Type-species: Apterogyna olivieri Latreille, 1809; by monotypy. Diagnosis. Male characters, as for the tribe, scape wider than long; apical margin of second tergum with or without fringe; second tergum of female wholly black; vertex low; apical margin of first and second terga with a median patch of pale pubescence, occupying about middle quarter of tergal width (Fig. 20); pygidium bordered by acute denticles (Fig. 21). Distribution. Contains three species: 1. A. mutilloides Smith, 1855, both sexes known, from Northern India and Yemen. 2. A. olivieri Latreille, 1809, male identity uncertain, female recorded from Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia. 3. A. mocsaryi Andre, 1905, only male known, from Egypt, Israel; lectotype deposited in the collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, herewith designated, specimen on pin, apex of right antenna missing, labelled: "Aegyptus, Schmkn. 97", "Makkatam", "apterogyna Mocsaryi Andre, nov. sp., " (in Andre's handwriting), "Lectotypus, Apterogyna mocsaryi Andre, teste: C. Nagy-1968" (type-label with red frame) (in Dr. L. Móczár' s handwriting). Hym. Typ. No. 6963. Two male paralectotypes with same labels as above, save the label of Andre, one male with abdomen missing, second with right antenna incomplete apically (all in the collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest). Hym. Typ. Nos. 6964, 6965. Technically, mocsaryi may be the unknown male of olivieri, but their colour pattern is discrepant; second tergum of the former is red, black in the latter (Apterogyna mocsaryi f. wittmeri Invrea, 1950, syn. n., is one of the numerous colour-variants of mocsaryi, not supported by any other structural feature). Genus Micatagla gen. n. Type-species: Apterogyna schultzei Andre, 1909; by present designation. Diagnosis. Male unknown; female body, appendages and pubescence uniformly purple yellow throughout; vertex low; first flagellar segment almost twice as long as pedicel; temples behind eyes with a delicate adorbital groove; apical margin of terga without patch or fringe (Fig. 24); basal half of pygidium bordered by large, acute denticles, same are extremely small, almost vanishing on the apical half (Fig. 25). Distribution. Contains only Micatagla schultzei (Andre, 1909) comb, n., known from Namibia. Tribe Doryleikini nov. Diagnosis. Nocturnal; both sexes without median patch, apical fringe, or yellow integumental spot on first two abdominal terga; male eye and ocelli rather large, antennoocular distance at most as long as or shorter than transverse diameter of median ocellus (Fig. 1); parapsidal furrows and notaulices developed on mesoscutum; mesopleuron without acetabular carina; trochanter of middle leg either with or without a conical tubercle