ZOOLOGICAL NOTES 



185 



short list of the rarer species may be of interest to some of the 

 readers of the "Annals of Scottish Natural History." A more 

 complete list may yet be furnished. 



Segestria, Latr. 



senoculata, Linn. 

 Oonops, Templeton. 



pulcker, Tempi. 

 Micaria, C. L. Koch. 



p ul i car ia, Sund. 

 Drassus, Walck. 



lapidicolens, Walck. 



pubescens, Thorell. 



mysticus. New to science. 

 Clubiona, Latr. 



reclusa, Cambr. 



liitesceiis, West. 



holosericea, De Geer. 



comta, C. L. Koch. 



pollens, C. L. Koch. 

 Nesticus, Thor. 



ccllulaniis, Clerck. 

 Euryopis, Menge. 



flavomaculata, C. L. Koch. 

 Neriene, Blackw. 



atra, Blackw. 



longipalpis, Sund. 



nigra, Blackw. 



vagans, Blackw. 



longimana, C. L. Koch. 



retusa, Westr. 



Clarkii, Cambr. 



livida, Blackw. 



neglecta, Cambr. 



viaria, Blackw. 



fusca, Blackw. 

 Walckenaera, Blackw. 



brcvipes, \Vestring. 



bifrons, Blackw. 



fuscipes, Wider. 



pumila, Blackw. 



obscura, Blackw. 



flavipes, Blackw. 



hamalis, Blackw. 



latifrons, Cambr. 



obtusa, Black. 



capita, Westr. Only one 

 other British specimen. 

 Epeira, Walck. 



ciicurbitina, Clerck. 



agalena, Walck. 



cornnta, Clerck. 

 Trochosa, C. L. Koch. 



leopardus, Sund. 



ruricola, De Geer. 

 Neon, Sim. 



reticulahis, Blackw. 

 Euophrys, C. L. Koch. 



cequipes, Cambr. 

 Hasarius, Simon. 



arcuatus, Clk. 



Adansonii, Savigny. 



MORRIS YOUNG, The Museum, Paisley. 



Note on a Bifid Worm. Mr. Gilchrist Clark of Speddoch 

 recently gave me one of those rare abnormalities a worm with two 

 tails. It had been found amongst some worms kept for angling 

 purposes. The species was the ordinary Brandling (Lumbricus 

 ftetidus). Considerably less than a dozen instances of this curious 

 malformation in worms are on record, and it so happens that, 

 including the specimen under notice, no less than four of these 

 have passed through my hands. So many as four having been in 

 the possession of one individual would seem to indicate that this 

 " freak " is not so rare as is generally supposed. I have presented 

 this specimen to the Museum of Science and Art in Edinburgh. 

 ROBERT SERVICE, Maxwelltown. 



