602 Mr. Buackwaut’s Descriptions of new Species of Spiders. 
family Dysderidæ, to which it unquestionably appertains, and of placing it, 
together with Segestria perfida and Segestria senoculata, both species of con- 
siderable dimensions and provided with four branchial sacs, among the spi- 
ders of the second division, or those which have only two sacs*. 
Having endeavoured succinctly to point out the insufficiency of the charac- 
ters selected to distinguish the foregoing primary groups into which spiders 
have been divided, I venture to recommend the difference in the number of 
eyes with which those animals are provided as the most satisfactory basis of 
their distribution into tribes; supplying, as it does, well-defined characters 
not difficult to be ascertained, and being in perfect harmony with the leading 
principle on which the subordinate groups are, for the most part, esta- 
blished. 
In the present limited state of our knowledge of the order Araneidea it 
admits of a division into three tribes only. 
1. OcroNocuLINA. Eyes eight. 
2. SENOCULINA. Eyes six. 
3. Brnocutina. Eyes two. 
The first tribe, Octonoculina, is much the most extensive of the three, com- 
prising numerous genera, which present considerable differences in organiza- 
tion and economy: closely connected with this group by intimate relations 
of affinity and analogy, the second tribe, Senoculina, includes seven or eight 
genera, species belonging to most of which are indigenous to'Great Britain ; 
and the third tribe, Binoculina, contains the single genus Nops, which has 
been recently established by Mr. MacLeay for the reception of two remark- 
able species of extra-European spiders ft. 
The newly-discovered spiders described in the following pages are arranged 
according to the method proposed above; and it is a fact deserving of notice, 
that they have been captured, without exception, in the north of England and 
Wales. 
Considering the narrow limits within which my researches in arachnology 
* Cours d'Entomologie, p. 514-15. 
5 + Annals of Natural History, vol. ii. p. 2, et seg: 
