JV. Banks — Spiders and Mites from the Bermuda Islands. 27 1 



low and quite broad in front. The mandibles are large and gibbous 

 above at base, plainly divergent, in front with many small granules 

 from each of which arises a bristle. Posterior eye-row straight, a 

 little longer than the anterior ; all eyes sub- 

 equal. A. M. E. less than their diameter 

 apart, and as close to the equal A. S. E. ; 



P. M. E. once and one-half their diameter Figure 3.— Eutichurus 

 , ,. „ . i -n ci -n insulanus ; epigynum. 



apart, about diameter from the equal P. o. E. 



Legs moderately long, very hairy, with a few weak spines ; two 

 pairs under the tibia? and metatarsi I and II ; tibia? Ill and IV 

 below with one spine near base, one near middle, and a pair at tip, 

 these metatarsi with three pairs below. Abdomen about once and 

 three-fourths as long as broad, broadest behind the middle, rounded 

 at base and tip, convex above ; the superior spinnerets long, two- 

 jointed, the apical joint tapering and as long as the basal; epigynum 

 shows two oblique, elliptical openings, some distance apart. 



Length ? , 5.5 mm . No. 2362. 



One female from the Bermudas (without more definite locality) 

 collected by W. G. Van Name, in May. It occurs also in Hayti. 



DICTYNIDiE. 



Dictyna, sp. 



One young specimen, without particular locality. No. 2367. 



AGALENIDJE. 



Tegenaria derhami Scopoli. 



Aranea derhami Scop., Entom. Carxrioli., p. 400, 1763. 



Tegenaria derhami Emerton, Trans. Conn. Acad., viii, p. 29, pi. vii, figs. 

 6, 6c ; 1890. 



Several specimens ; one from Walsingham, 3 May ; another 

 preyed upon by Plexippus payhulli, 20 April. It is a cosmopolitan 

 spider. Nos. 2326, 2327. 



PHOLCIDiE. 



Pholcus tipuloides Koch. 



Pholcus tipuloides Koch, Die Arachn. Australiens, p. 281, 1871. 



Pholcus tipuloides Marx, Proc. Phil. Acad. Nat. Sci., 1889, p. 99, pi. iv, fig. 5. 



Several specimens, some from Tucker's Island cave, 3 May. (It 

 occurred at and within the entrance of the cave in considerable 

 numbers. — A. E. V.). A cosmotropical species. Nos. 2:515, 2316, 

 2320, 2361, 2409. 



