BY W. J. RAINBOW., 



333 



Abdomen ovate, moderately projecting over base of cephalo- 

 thorax, yellowish-brown, densely clothed with long, coarse, 

 yellowish nairs. 



Epiyyne a simple transverse slit. 



Ma mill (S cylindrical, in two pairs, and abbreviated; of these 

 the second pair are somewhat the longest. 



Loc. — Neneba, Nov., 1896. 



This interesting species makes the third genus now known of 

 the six-e3^ed Aviculariidce. In 1873 L. Koch established the first 

 under the name of Masteria, and in 1889 E. Simon founded 

 another, for which he proposed the name Accola. Of these the 

 first was founded on a single species obtained on the Island of 

 Ovalau, and was described by L. Koch as Masteria hirsiUa in his 

 monograph "Die Arachniden Australiens," pp. 457-459, Tab, 

 XXXV., figs. 5-5(i. The genus and species established by E. Simon 

 as Accola lucifuga were described in Ann. Soc. Ent. France, 1889, 

 p. 191.* 



Suborder ARANE.S; VER.S;. 



First Section Arane.e ver.e cribellat.e. 

 Family ULOBORID^. 

 Genus Uloborus, Latr. 

 6. Uloborus flavolineatus, sp.nov. 



(Plate VII., figs. 3, 3«.) 



9. Cephalothorax 5-9mm. long, 4mm. broad; abdomen 12-5mm. 

 long, 4'2 mm. broad. 



Cephalothorax moderately convex, sparingly clothed with 

 yellowish pubescence. Cajncthi'^h, arched, yellow-brown. Cly2')eus 

 moderately convex, median area and margins yellow-brown, and 

 the intervening lateral bars pale yellow; radial grooves distinct, 

 and the median depression deep and strong. Marginal hand 

 narrow. 



* Hist. Nat. des Araignees, 2ncl Ed., Vol i., 1892, pp. 189-190. 



