PARAPHIDIPPUS. 275 
anterior marginal white band, and a large white marginal spot, 
just behind the middle . . . . . ee . marmoratus, sp. 0. 
. Ventral area with a central band of thinly clustered ochre- yellow 
scale-like hairs. Abdomen more or less as in P. disjunctus, with 
marginal white or orange band more or less broken up, or entirely 
unbroken; clothed with coppery metallic scales, having pink and 
green reflections . . 2... ee 8 ee ee ee eee Chrysis. 
Notr.—P. multicolor and P. militaris (Hentz), P. fartilis and P. mewicanus (Peckh.), and P. tricolor and 
P. aureus (C. L. Koch) are unknown to me, so that they cannot be included in the Table. P. mewicanus.is 
stated by Peckham to be identical with P. asinarius (C. L. Koch), and it is therefore probably closely allied to 
P. marmoratus. 
1. Paraphidippus laniipes, sp.n. (Tab. XXV. figg. 11, lla-e, ¢.) 
Type, 3d, in coll. Godman & Salvin. Total length 12 millim. 
Carapace clothed with iridescent scales, with a band of white extending from behind the lateral anterior 
eyes nearly to the posterior margin. Abdomen iridescent, encircled with a broad uninterrupted white 
band ; no dorsal white spots present. Legs unicolorous brown, the first and second pairs hairy beneath, 
their femora, patella, tibiee, protarsi, and tarsi clothed with a dense fringe of woolly curly hairs, curving 
upwards. Mandible as in P. inermis, but with a less elongated apical cusp, lower or upper. The fang 
has a central cusp, as in some varieties of P. inermis. The palpal bulb is very similar also, but the apical 
spine is longer and more slender, and very similar to that of P. chrysis. 
Hab. Mexico, Jalisco (Godman). 
2. Paraphidippus inermis, sp.n. (Tab. XXV. figg. 12, 12 a-d, ¢.) 
Type, ¢, in coll. Godman & Salvin. Total length 8 millim. 
Similar to P. chrysis in coloration, but differing from it in the great development of the lower mandibular tooth 
and of the apical mandibular cusps. From P. funebris, which also has a greatly developed lower mandi- 
bular tooth, it may be known by the non-bicuspidate inner margin of the fang. Varieties occur in which 
the apical cusps are but little developed. 
Hab. Mexico, Omilteme, Cuernavaca, Atoyac, Orizaba (H. H. Smith); Costa Rica 
(Sarg). 
3. Paraphidippus funebris. (Tab. XXV. figg. 13, 13 a-h, g; 14, 14a, 2.) 
Phidippus funebris, Banks, Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. (3) i. p. 280, t. 17. fig. 22 (¢ ¢) ‘. . 
Type 3d, gynetype Q, in coll. Calif. Acad. Sciences, San Francisco. Total length, ¢ 10-5, 9 13-5 millim. 
3. Dried specimen. Carapace deep mahogany-brown, the cephalic area clothed with green scales and black 
hairs, having a narrow band of white scales extending from between the lateral eyes almost to the 
posterior margin, convergent behind. Abdomen entirely clothed over the dorsal area with brilliant green 
(or coppery) metallic scales; the encircling white band is broken up into a few elongate spots; the 
dorsal area has four pairs of white spots, the first two elongate, the second pair transverse. Mandibles 
red-brown, often with a slight green reflection. Legs black or red-brown, clothed with black and white 
hairs and also with numerous white scales, on the underside with hoary-white hairs; tibia and protarsus i. 
fringed with a very dense clothing of brown hairs; tarsi ili. and iv. paler; patella and tarsus i. clothed 
with white hairs beneath, and all the tarsi with a few conspicuous white scales at the base above. Tarsus 
of palpus pale, or white, at the apex. The coloration, of course, varies also, but not very much. 
2. Deep brown or black, with brown hairs. Abdomen with the two apical marginal’ spots only pure white 
2nf 2 
