THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 305 



elongate, with some clavate hairs on the sides, about eight on the hind 

 border of each scutum. 



Length, 2 to 2.2 mm. 



From Lake Worth and Palm Beach, Florida. 



Garypas Califor?iicus, n. sp. — Cephalothorax dark brown, behind 

 showing a pair of pale submedian spots, dorsal scutse brownish, paler in 

 middle, and each with a central dark brown dot; palpi yellowish, the hand 

 more red-brown. Cephalothorax subtriangular, emarginate in front, fully as 

 long as broad behind, with two large eyes close together, the hind one 

 looking backward. Femur of palpus plainly longer than cephalothorax, 

 but little widened apically, tibia much shorter, but plainly broader, scarcely 

 convex on middle of inner side, claw large and long, the hand barely 

 shorter than tibia, but nearly twice as wide, being convex on inner base, 

 outer side slightly and evenly convex, fingers plainly longer than hand, 

 strongly curved ; ail clothed with fine, short, simple hairs, some at base of 

 fingers much longer ; hairs on posterior margin of abdominal scuta? almost 

 invisible. Legs long and slender, with fine, simple hairs ; trochanters visible 

 on legs iii and iv. Ventral scutse also each with a central dark dot. 



Length, 4.5 mm. 



Two specimens from Palo Alto, Calif., and San Nicolas Island, Calif. 



Garyops, n. gen. 

 In appearance similar to Garypus. The serrula attached to man- 

 dibles ; the cephalothorax narrowed in front, and a pair of tuberosities 

 each side, but no eyes on them. The femora of all legs show the 

 trochantins distinctly separated, as plain in femur i as the others ; no 

 apparent transverse groove on cephalothorax ; mandibles small, a distinct 

 bifurcate stylet ; coxae of pedipalpi prolonged on median line in front. 

 Dorsal scuta? of abdomen not plainly divided ; coxse i and ii do not meet 

 on the middle line, and coxse i barely touch each other at one point. 



Garyops depressa, n. sp. — Pale yellowish, anterior part of cephalo- 

 thorax and the palpi red-brown. Cephalothorax about two-thirds as wide 

 in front as behind, constricted at anterior third, and here above is a black 

 mark or slight tubercle, posterior border of cephalothorax prolonged to a 

 median point, which indents the basal abdominal segments, its surface 

 smooth. Palpi nearly as long as body, not very heavv, the trochanter 

 large, with a prominent corner at base behind ; femur about as long as 

 cephalothorax, suddenly swollen, broadest at base ; tibia shorter than the 

 femur, not much swollen on inner side ; claw longer than femur, hand 



